TY - JOUR
T1 - Trends in upper gastrointestinal diagnosis over four decades in Lusaka, Zambia
T2 - A retrospective analysis of endoscopic findings
AU - Kayamba, Violet
AU - Sinkala, Edford
AU - Mwanamakondo, Stayner
AU - Soko, Rose
AU - Kawimbe, Boniface
AU - Amadi, Beatrice
AU - Zulu, Isaac
AU - Nzaisenga, Jean Baptiste
AU - Banda, Themba
AU - Mumbwe, Chipasha
AU - Phiri, Evans
AU - Munkonge, Philip
AU - Kelly, Paul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Kayamba et al.
PY - 2015/10/6
Y1 - 2015/10/6
N2 - Background and aims: There a shortage of robust information about profiles of gastrointestinal disease in sub-Saharan Africa. The endoscopy unit of the University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka has been running without interruption since 1977 and this 38-year record is largely intact. We report an analysis of endoscopic findings over this period. Methods: Written endoscopy records from 29th September 1977 to 16th December 2014 were recovered, computerised, coded by two experienced endoscopists and analysed. Temporal trends were analysed using tables, graphs, and unconditional logistic regression, with age, sex of patient, decade, and endoscopist as independent variables to adjust for inter-observer variation. Results: Sixteen thousand nine hundred fifty-three records were identified and analysed. Diagnosis of gastric ulcer rose by 22 %, and that of duodenal ulcer fell by 14 % per decade. Endoscopically diagnosed oesophageal cancer increased by 32 % per decade, but gastric cancer rose only in patients under 60 years of age (21 % per decade). Oesophageal varices were the commonest finding in patients presenting with haematemesis, increasing by 14 % per decade in that patient group. Two HIV-related diagnoses, oesophageal candidiasis and Kaposi's sarcoma, rose from almost zero to very high levels in the 1990s but fell substantially after 2005 when anti-retroviral therapy became widely available. Conclusions: This useful dataset suggests that there are important trends in some endoscopic findings over four decades. These trends are not explained by inter-observer variation. Reasons for the divergent trends in incidence of peptic ulceration and apparent trends in diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal cancers merit further exploration.
AB - Background and aims: There a shortage of robust information about profiles of gastrointestinal disease in sub-Saharan Africa. The endoscopy unit of the University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka has been running without interruption since 1977 and this 38-year record is largely intact. We report an analysis of endoscopic findings over this period. Methods: Written endoscopy records from 29th September 1977 to 16th December 2014 were recovered, computerised, coded by two experienced endoscopists and analysed. Temporal trends were analysed using tables, graphs, and unconditional logistic regression, with age, sex of patient, decade, and endoscopist as independent variables to adjust for inter-observer variation. Results: Sixteen thousand nine hundred fifty-three records were identified and analysed. Diagnosis of gastric ulcer rose by 22 %, and that of duodenal ulcer fell by 14 % per decade. Endoscopically diagnosed oesophageal cancer increased by 32 % per decade, but gastric cancer rose only in patients under 60 years of age (21 % per decade). Oesophageal varices were the commonest finding in patients presenting with haematemesis, increasing by 14 % per decade in that patient group. Two HIV-related diagnoses, oesophageal candidiasis and Kaposi's sarcoma, rose from almost zero to very high levels in the 1990s but fell substantially after 2005 when anti-retroviral therapy became widely available. Conclusions: This useful dataset suggests that there are important trends in some endoscopic findings over four decades. These trends are not explained by inter-observer variation. Reasons for the divergent trends in incidence of peptic ulceration and apparent trends in diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal cancers merit further exploration.
KW - Africa
KW - Cancer
KW - Endoscopy
KW - Gastroduodenal disorders
KW - HIV
KW - Non-communicable disease
KW - Peptic ulceration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84943582124&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12876-015-0353-8
DO - 10.1186/s12876-015-0353-8
M3 - Article
SN - 1471-230X
VL - 15
SP - 1
JO - BMC Gastroenterology
JF - BMC Gastroenterology
IS - 1
M1 - 127
ER -