Abstract

Lung cancer is a major global public health burden constituting 11.6% of all new cancer diagnoses and 18.4% of all cancer-related mortality. To describe the clinical profile and initial treatment of non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda. We reviewed charts of a cohort of patients with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer, treated between January 2013 and November 2015 at the Uganda Cancer Institute. A total of 74 patients met the inclusion criteria. The median age was 56 years (IQR 47-70), with 16.2% below the age 45 years, and 51% were female. Only 10 percent were active smokers and the most frequent histological subtype was adenocarcinoma (71%). The majority (91.9%) had stage IV disease at diagnosis and frequent metastases to contralateral lung, liver, and bones. Twenty-seven (27) patients received platinum-based chemotherapy, while 27 patients received erlotinib, and only 4 patients received palliative thoracic radiotherapy. The median survival time was 12.4 months, and the overall response rate was 32.7%. There was no survival difference by type of systemic treatment, and on multivariate analysis, poor performance status was predictive of adverse outcomes (p < 0.001). Patients with non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda frequently presented with late-stage disease at diagnosis. The majority of patients were female, never-smokers, and had predominantly adenocarcinoma subtype.

Highlights

  • Introduction: Lung cancer is a major global public health burden constituting 11.6% of all new cancer diagnoses and 18.4% of all cancer-related mortality Purpose: To describe the clinical profile and initial treatment of non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda Methods: We reviewed charts of a cohort of patients with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer, treated between January 2013 and November 2015 at the Uganda Cancer Institute

  • Patients with non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda frequently presented with late-stage disease at diagnosis

  • The majority of patients were referred from private hospitals (33%), and equal proportions resided in two large districts in central Uganda, Kampala, and Wakiso districts each contributing 16% of patients with lung cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer is a major global public health burden constituting 11.6% of all new cancer diagnoses and 18.4% of all cancer-related mortality Purpose: To describe the clinical profile and initial treatment of non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda Methods: We reviewed charts of a cohort of patients with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer, treated between January 2013 and November 2015 at the Uganda Cancer Institute. Conclusions: Patients with non-small cell lung cancer in Uganda frequently presented with late-stage disease at diagnosis. Lung cancer is a major global public health burden constituting 11.6% of all new cancer diagnoses and 18.4% of all cancer-related mortality(1). Non-small cell lung cancer constitutes 80-85% of all lung cancer cases and represents a heterogeneous group of diseases with several histological subtypes including adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, large cell carcinoma, and NSCLC not otherwise specified (NOS).

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