International Society of Surgery (ISS)

Société Internationale de Chirurgie (SIC)

Integrated Societies: IATSIC | IASMEN | BSI | ISDS

EVALUATING CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL PATTERN AND MANAGEMENT OF COLORECTAL CANCER FOR ADULT PATIENTS PRESENTING AT QUEEN ELIZABETH CENTRAL HOSPITAL tmasina@kuhes.ac.mw

 
EVALUATING CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL PATTERN AND MANAGEMENT OF COLORECTAL CANCER FOR ADULT PATIENTS PRESENTING AT QUEEN ELIZABETH CENTRAL HOSPITAL
Author Details
5
Including the presenting author
Thokozani Masina tmasina@kuhes.ac.mw Kamuzu University of Health Sciences surgery Blantyre Malawi *
Linda Chokotho lchokotho@must.ac.mw Malawi University of Science and Technology Academy of Medical Sciences Blantyre Malawi
Patrick Noah pnoah@kuhes.ac.mw Kamuzu University of Health Sciences surgery blantyre Malawi
Wakisa Mulwafu wmulwafu@kuhes.ac.mw Kamuzu University of Health Sciences surgery blantyre Malawi
Leo Masamba leomasamba@yahoo.co.uk Ministry of Health, Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital Oncology blantyre Malawi
Thokozani Masina
tmasina@kuhes.ac.mw
Malawi
Abstract
Oral or Poster
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer mortality and the third prevalent cancer globally. In Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the incidence is increasing. This retrospective cross-sectional study evaluated clinicopathological pattern and management of CRC for adult patients presenting at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital (QECH), Malawi.
The review of oncology and surgical register books identified patients diagnosed with CRC who presented between 2012 to 2022. The variables assessed were age, sex, HIV status, symptoms, family history, diagnostic approach, tumour site, histological diagnosis, treatment modality, and length of hospital stay (LOHS).
There were 192 patients identified with CRC. The median age was 45 years [interquartile range (IQR)=43.5-60], with slight male predominance at 100 (52.08%). There were 23 (11.98%) patients with HIV infection and all were on treatment. Abdominal pain and rectal bleeding were the predominant symptoms occuring in 100 (52.08%) and 78 (40.63%) respectively. The mean duration of signs and symptoms was 7.6 months (SD=4.6). Over half of the patients, 113 (58.85%) were in clinical stage IV. The majority were diagnosed at laparotomy 116 (60.42%), followed by colonoscopy 19 (9.90%). Out of the 192 participants, 110 (57.29%) had histology reports confirming CRC, while 82 (42.71%) had no histology reports. All the available histology reports showed adenocarcinoma. Surgery was the main treatment for 155 (80.73%) patients while chemotherapy was offered to 81 (42.19%) patients.
CRC at QECH is predominantly diagnosed in young patients at advanced stages. Screening younger age groups could improve with early diagnosis and management.
https://storage.unitedwebnetwork.com/files/1258/f5e3d4049772fd12da88e3a93688f559.png
Only accept images in .jpg or .png format. The image size must not exceed 1 MB.
https://storage.unitedwebnetwork.com/files/1258/2dd01e3e9bd350414f1c09565bede7f3.png
Only accept images in .jpg or .png format. The image size must not exceed 1 MB.
Category
1 General Topics organized by ISS/SIC
1.03 General Surgery
Withdrawn
246
Abstract Prizes
No
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript conforming to the format of orignial articles in the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025