Show simple item record

AuthorJoseph, A.O.
AuthorLi, Y.-H.
AuthorSalako, O.
AuthorDoi, S.
AuthorBalogun, O.D.
AuthorAwofeso, O.M.
AuthorAbdulkareem, F.
AuthorOnitilo, A.A.
Available date2022-04-18T08:10:54Z
Publication Date2021
Publication Nameecancermedicalscience
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ECANCER.2021.1190
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/29968
AbstractBackground: Diagnosis and treatment of cancer rely heavily on imaging, histopathology and molecular information. Incomplete or missing tumour information can hinder the delivery of high-quality care in oncology practice, especially in resource-limited countries. To evaluate the completeness of histopathology reporting in a real-world setting and identify areas for future cancer care delivery research efforts, we retrospectively analysed reports from patients diagnosed with breast cancer who received care at a high-volume oncology department at a hospital in Lagos, Nigeria. Methods: Demographic, institutional and histopathology characteristics were retrospectively obtained from 1,001 patient records from 2007 to 2016. Completeness was defined as reporting five tumour features (tumour histology, tumour grade, laterality, oestrogen receptor (ER) or progesterone receptor (PR) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)) for biopsy specimens and seven tumour features (tumour size, tumour histology, tumour grade, laterality, ER/PR, HER2 and lymph node involvement) for surgical specimens. Results: The mean age of patients was 48.6 -11.7 years with a predominantly female population (99.3%). A majority of pathologic reports were produced after 2011, and two-thirds of the reports originated from centres or labs within Lagos, Nigeria (67.7%). Most reports documented primary site (98.0%) and specimen type (85.0%) while other characteristics were less often recorded. This led to substantial variation in reporting between biopsy (13.4%) and surgical (6.1%) specimens for an overall low pathology report completeness <10%. Conclusion: The majority of patient records analysed lacked complete documentation of breast cancer histopathological characteristics commonly used in oncology practice. Our study highlights a need to identify and address the contributing factors for incomplete histopathological reporting in Nigeria and will guide future clinical programmatic developments. Copyright:
Languageen
Publisherecancer Global Foundation
Subjectepidermal growth factor receptor 2
estrogen receptor
progesterone receptor
adult
breast cancer
cancer grading
cohort analysis
controlled study
demography
female
high volume hospital
histology
histopathology
human
human tissue
lymph node
major clinical study
male
Nigeria
pathology
retrospective study
Review
tumor biopsy
tumor volume
TitleA review of breast cancer pathology reports in Nigeria
TypeArticle Review
Volume Number15


Files in this item

FilesSizeFormatView

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record