Abstract

Prostate cancer is one of the most frequently diagnosed cancers in menand a major cause of cancer-related deaths in men, globally. The managementof prostate cancer in Africa is unique; most patients present withadvanced disease as result of a largely under-developed healthcare delivery.However, due to the underdeveloped healthcare system in Africa,there are unique limitations to delivering these treatments. Thus, the needfor this scoping review on the management of prostate cancer in Africa.Aim: To give an account of the pattern of presentation, histological types,investigative and treatment modalities of prostate cancer in Africa. A literaturesearch through PubMed, Google Scholar, and African Journal Onlineon the management of prostate cancer in Africa was conducted. Results arethen reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for SystematicReview and Meta-analyses extension for Scoping Review. Forty-three articlesfully satisfied the inclusion criteria and were used for this review.The commonest presentation of prostate cancer was lower urinarytract symptoms, followed by bone pain and urinary retention in that order.Adenocarcinoma was the commonest histological type for 98.5% of thestudy. A total 23.3% of patients had hormonal treatment which was the commonesttreatment option. Chemotherapy and open radical prostatectomywere used in 17.7 and 12.9% cases respectively. The use of robot-assistedradical prostatectomy was not an option of care noted in the review. Thefindings of this study highlight the need for integration of modern investigativemodalities and treatment options for prostate cancer in Africa.

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