Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population

Background. Prostate biopsy remains an important surgical procedure in the diagnostic pathway for prostate cancer, but access to prostate biopsy service is poorly studied in the Nigerian population. While there has been a well-documented delay in patient presentation with prostate cancer in Nigeria,...

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Main Authors: Olufunmilade A. Omisanjo, Olawale O. Ogunremi, Olufemi O. Akinola, Olaolu O. Adebayo, Olufemi Ojewuyi, Mofeyisayo O. Omorinde, Abimbola A. Abolarinwa, Stephen O. Ikuerowo, Fatai A. Balogun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:Journal of Cancer Epidemiology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5534683
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spelling doaj-d7afe13871e248009d804e02e9aaa0582021-08-30T00:01:19ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Cancer Epidemiology1687-85662021-01-01202110.1155/2021/5534683Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian PopulationOlufunmilade A. Omisanjo0Olawale O. Ogunremi1Olufemi O. Akinola2Olaolu O. Adebayo3Olufemi Ojewuyi4Mofeyisayo O. Omorinde5Abimbola A. Abolarinwa6Stephen O. Ikuerowo7Fatai A. Balogun8Department of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryDepartment of SurgeryBackground. Prostate biopsy remains an important surgical procedure in the diagnostic pathway for prostate cancer, but access to prostate biopsy service is poorly studied in the Nigerian population. While there has been a well-documented delay in patient presentation with prostate cancer in Nigeria, little is however known about how long patients wait to have a histological diagnosis of prostate cancer and start treatment after presenting at Nigerian hospitals. Method. This was a descriptive retrospective study to document the specific duration of the various timelines in getting a diagnosis of prostate cancer at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, Nigeria. Results. There were 270 patients. The mean age was 69.50±8.03 years (range 45-90). The mean PSA at presentation was 563.2±1879.2 ng/ml (range 2.05-15400), and the median PSA was 49.3 ng/ml. The median waiting times were (i) 10 days from referral to presentation; (ii) 30 days from presentation to biopsy; (iii) 24 days from biopsy to review of histology; (iv) 1 day from histology review to discussion/planning of treatment. The median overall waiting time from referral to treatment was 103 days. The mean time from presentation to biopsy was significantly shorter for patients with PSA of ≥50 ng/ml compared to those with PSA<50 ng/ml. p=0.048. Overall, the median time from biopsy to histology was significantly shorter for patients whose specimens were processed in private laboratories (17 days) compared to those whose specimens were processed at the teaching hospital laboratory (30 days), p≤0.001. Conclusion. There is a significant delay within the health care system in getting a prostate cancer diagnosis in the Nigerian population studied. The major points of the identified delay were the waiting time from patient presentation to having a biopsy done and the histology report waiting time.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5534683
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language English
format Article
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author Olufunmilade A. Omisanjo
Olawale O. Ogunremi
Olufemi O. Akinola
Olaolu O. Adebayo
Olufemi Ojewuyi
Mofeyisayo O. Omorinde
Abimbola A. Abolarinwa
Stephen O. Ikuerowo
Fatai A. Balogun
spellingShingle Olufunmilade A. Omisanjo
Olawale O. Ogunremi
Olufemi O. Akinola
Olaolu O. Adebayo
Olufemi Ojewuyi
Mofeyisayo O. Omorinde
Abimbola A. Abolarinwa
Stephen O. Ikuerowo
Fatai A. Balogun
Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
Journal of Cancer Epidemiology
author_facet Olufunmilade A. Omisanjo
Olawale O. Ogunremi
Olufemi O. Akinola
Olaolu O. Adebayo
Olufemi Ojewuyi
Mofeyisayo O. Omorinde
Abimbola A. Abolarinwa
Stephen O. Ikuerowo
Fatai A. Balogun
author_sort Olufunmilade A. Omisanjo
title Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
title_short Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
title_full Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
title_fullStr Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
title_full_unstemmed Waiting Times for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis in a Nigerian Population
title_sort waiting times for prostate cancer diagnosis in a nigerian population
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Cancer Epidemiology
issn 1687-8566
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Background. Prostate biopsy remains an important surgical procedure in the diagnostic pathway for prostate cancer, but access to prostate biopsy service is poorly studied in the Nigerian population. While there has been a well-documented delay in patient presentation with prostate cancer in Nigeria, little is however known about how long patients wait to have a histological diagnosis of prostate cancer and start treatment after presenting at Nigerian hospitals. Method. This was a descriptive retrospective study to document the specific duration of the various timelines in getting a diagnosis of prostate cancer at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, Nigeria. Results. There were 270 patients. The mean age was 69.50±8.03 years (range 45-90). The mean PSA at presentation was 563.2±1879.2 ng/ml (range 2.05-15400), and the median PSA was 49.3 ng/ml. The median waiting times were (i) 10 days from referral to presentation; (ii) 30 days from presentation to biopsy; (iii) 24 days from biopsy to review of histology; (iv) 1 day from histology review to discussion/planning of treatment. The median overall waiting time from referral to treatment was 103 days. The mean time from presentation to biopsy was significantly shorter for patients with PSA of ≥50 ng/ml compared to those with PSA<50 ng/ml. p=0.048. Overall, the median time from biopsy to histology was significantly shorter for patients whose specimens were processed in private laboratories (17 days) compared to those whose specimens were processed at the teaching hospital laboratory (30 days), p≤0.001. Conclusion. There is a significant delay within the health care system in getting a prostate cancer diagnosis in the Nigerian population studied. The major points of the identified delay were the waiting time from patient presentation to having a biopsy done and the histology report waiting time.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5534683
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