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The pattern of cancer in Kampala, Uganda


Ignatius Kakande
Lawrence Ekwaro
Wiam W Obote
Gorreti Nassali
Rarban Irene Kakande
S Kabuye

Abstract

This study on the pattern of cancer in Kampala is based on data collected from  2246 patients at Mulago Hospital and 355  patients at St. Francis Hospital  Nsambya, between January 1995 and December 1998. All diagnoses were  histologically  confirmed. Of these 2601 patients, 1225 were males and 1376 were females. Kaposi's Sarcoma was the commonest malignancy, accounting for 28.6%  of all cancers. Among males, Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS) was the most common cancer (37.1°/o) followed by prostatic cancer(9.60/0), lymphomas (8.5%), oesophageal cancer (7.0°/o), eye malignancies (3.8%) and pharyngeal cancer (3.8%). In females, the order of frequency of malignancies was cervical cancer (22.200),  Kaposi's Sarcoma (21.1°/0), breast cancer (10.9%), lymphoma (5.9%), oesophageal cancer (4.6%) and eye malignancies (3.60/0). The incidence of KS has  dramatically increased from 6.3% in males and 0.4% in females among patients with cancer diagnosed in 1977-80, before HIV infection was recognized. This paper compares the cancer patterns of 1995-98 with those of 1977-80 and discusses the possible influence of HIV infection on the change of patterns of  cancer in Uganda.

Key words: Pattern, cancer, malignancy, malignant diseases


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eISSN: 2073-9990
print ISSN: 1024-297X