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Social, demographic and healthcare factors associated with stage at diagnosis of cervical cancer: cross-sectional study in a tertiary hospital in Northern Uganda.


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Authors

Mwaka, Amos Deogratius 
Garimoi, Christopher Orach 
Were, Edward Maloba 
Wabinga, Henry 

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine patient and primary healthcare factors and stage at diagnosis in women with cervical cancer in Northern Uganda with the intention to identify factors that are associated with advanced stages in order to inform policies to improve survival from cervical cancer in low income and middle income countries. DESIGN: Cross-sectional hospital-based study. SETTING: Tertiary, not-for-profit private hospital in postconflict region. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive tissue-diagnosed symptomatic patients with cervical attending care. Of 166 patients, 149 were enrolled and analysed. PRIMARY OUTCOME: Cervical cancer stage at diagnosis. RESULTS: Most women were diagnosed at stages III (45%) or IV (21%). After controlling for age, marital status, educational attainment and number of biological children, there was evidence for association between advanced stage at diagnosis and pre-referral diagnosis of cancer by primary healthcare professionals (adjusted OR (AOR)=13.04:95% CI 3.59 to 47.3), and financial difficulties precluding prompt help seeking (AOR=5.5:95% CI 1.58 to 20.64). After adjusting for age, marital status and educational attainment, women with 5-9 biological children (AOR=0.27:95% CI 0.08 to 0.96) were less likely to be diagnosed with advanced stage (defined as stages III/IV) cancer. In this pilot study, there was no statistical evidence for associations between stage at diagnosis, and factors such as age at diagnosis and marital status. CONCLUSIONS: This study is a first attempt to understand the descriptive epidemiology of cervical cancer in rural Ugandan settings. Understanding individual patient factors, patients' behavioural characteristics and healthcare factors associated with advanced stage at diagnosis is essential for targeted effective public health interventions to promote prompt health seeking, diagnosis at early stage and improved survival from cervical cancer.

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Keywords

Cervical cancer, pathways to diagnosis and treatment, predictors of late stage, Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Cross-Sectional Studies, Delayed Diagnosis, Developing Countries, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Marital Status, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Parity, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Pilot Projects, Poverty, Rural Population, Tertiary Care Centers, Uganda, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms, Young Adult

Journal Title

BMJ Open

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2044-6055
2044-6055

Volume Title

6

Publisher

BMJ
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (100891/Z/13/Z)
The work was supported by Training Health Researchers into Vocational Excellence (THRiVE) in East Africa, Grant number 087540, funded by Wellcome Trust.