29 research outputs found
Anaemia in pregnant adolescent girls with malaria and practicing pica
Introduction: pregnancy during the adolescent period is challenging mainly because of the nutritional demands of both the adolescent and pregnancy period. The risk for anaemia increases especially in developing countries such as Ghana where malaria is endemic and the practice of pica is common. In this study, we sought to determine the prevalence of anaemia, pica practice and malaria infection among pregnant adolescent girls and assess the extent to which these factors are associated. Methods: two hundred and sixty five (265) pregnant adolescent girls were recruited from three hospitals in Accra. Haemoglobin levels, malaria infection and the practice of pica were assessed. Pearson’s Chi squared tests were used to determine associations and logistic regression analysis was used to determine the odds of being anaemic. Significance was set at p≤0.05. Results: anaemia prevalence was 76% with severity ranging from mild (47.8%) to severe (0.8%). About 27.5% were moderately anaemic. Pica was practiced in only 9.1% of the girls. Malaria infection was prevalent in 17.7% of the girls. The logistic regression analysis indicated that pregnant girls with malaria infection were 3.56 times more likely to be anaemic when compared to those without malaria. Also, those who practiced pica were 1.23 times more likely to be anaemic when compared to those who did not practice pica. Conclusion: anaemia is very prevalent in pregnant adolescent girls and is a public health problem. Drastic measures should be taken to reduce the high prevalence.The Pan African Medical Journal 2016;2
Dynamics of genotype-specific HPV clearance and reinfection in rural Ghana may compromise HPV screening approaches
Persistent Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection is a prerequisite for cervical cancer development. Few studies investigated clearance of high-risk HPV in low-and-middle-income countries. Our study investigated HPV clearance and persistence over four years in women from North Tongu District, Ghana. In 2010/2011, cervical swabs of 500 patients were collected and HPV genotyped (nested multiplex PCR) in Accra, Ghana. In 2014, 104 women who previously tested positive for high-risk HPV and remained untreated were re-tested for HPV. Cytobrush samples were genotyped (GP5+/6+ PCR & Luminex-MPG readout) in Berlin, Germany. Positively tested patients underwent colposcopy and treatment if indicated. Of 104 women, who tested high-risk HPV+ in 2010/2011, seven (6,7%; 95%CI: 2.7-13.4%) had ≥1 persistent high-risk-infection after ~4 years (mean age 39 years). Ninety-seven (93,3%; 95%CI: 86.6-97.3%) had cleared the original infection, while 22 (21.2%; 95%CI: 13.8-30.3%) had acquired new high-risk infections with other genotypes. Persistent types found were HPV 16, 18, 35, 39, 51, 52, 58, and 68. Among those patients, one case of CIN2 (HPV 68) and one micro-invasive cervical cancer (HPV 16) were detected. This longitudinal observational data suggest that single HPV screening rounds may lead to over-referral. Including type-specific HPV re-testing or additional triage methods could help reduce follow-up rates
Factors associated with gastro-duodenal disease in patients undergoing upper GI endoscopy at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra, Ghana.
Background: There is a high prevalence of gastro-duodenal disease in
sub-Saharan Africa. Peptic ulcer disease in dyspeptic patients, 24.5%,
was comparable to prevalence of gastro-duodenal disease among
symptomatic individuals in developed countries (12 \u2013 25%).
Limited data exists regarding its associated risk factors despite
accumulating evidence indicating that gastroduodenal disease is common
in Ghana. Objectives: This study investigates risk factors associated
with gastro-duodenal disease at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra,
Ghana. Methods: This study utilized a cross-sectional design to
consecutively recruit patients referred with upper gastro-intestinal
symptoms for endoscopy. The study questionnaire was administered to
study participants. Helicobacter pylori infection was confirmed by
rapid-urease examination at endoscopy. Results: Of 242 patients
sampled; 64 had duodenal ulcer, 66 gastric ulcer, 27gastric cancer and
64 non-ulcer dyspepsia. Nineteen (19) had duodenal and gastric ulcer
while 2 had gastric ulcer and cancer. A third (32.6%) of patients had
history of NSAIDuse. H. pylori was associated with gastric ulcer
(p=0.033) and duodenal ulcer (p=0.001). There was an increased
prevalence of duodenal ulcer in H. pylori-infected patients taking
NSAIDs, P=0.003. Conclusion: H. pylori was a major risk factor for
peptic ulcer disease. However, NSAID-related gastro-duodenal injury has
been shown to be common in H. pylori infected patients. It highlights
the need for awareness of the adverse gastro-intestinal effects in a H.
pylori endemic area
Human papillomavirus prevalence and type distribution in invasive cervical cancer in sub-Saharan Africa
In sub-Saharan Africa, invasive cervical cancer (ICC) incidence and mortality are among
the highest in the world. This cross-sectional epidemiological study assessed human
papillomavirus (HPV) prevalence and type distribution in women with ICC in Ghana,
Nigeria, and South Africa. Cervical biopsy specimens were obtained from women aged Âł21
years with lesions clinically suggestive of ICC. A questionnaire was used to evaluate the HIV
status and the medical, sexual, and reproductive history of women. Histopathological
diagnosis of ICC was determined by light microscopy examination of hematoxylin and eosin
stained sections of paraffin-embedded cervical specimens; samples with a confirmed
histopathological diagnosis underwent HPV DNA testing by polymerase chain reaction. HPVpositive
specimens were typed by reverse hybridization line probe assay. Between October
2007 and March 2010, cervical specimens from 659 women were collected (167 in Ghana,
192 in Nigeria, and 300 in South Africa); 570 cases were histologically confirmed as ICC. The tumor type was identified in 551/570 women with ICC; squamous cell carcinoma was
observed in 476/570 (83.5%) cases. The HPV-positivity rate in ICC cases was 90.4%
(515/570). In ICC cases with single HPV infection (447/515 [86.8%]), the most commonly
detected HPV types were HPV16 (51.2%), HPV18 (17.2%), HPV35 (8.7%), HPV45 (7.4%),
HPV33 (4.0%), and HPV52 (2.2%). HPV type distribution appeared to differ according to
tumor type and HIV status. In conclusion, HPV16 and HPV18 were the most frequently
detected types in women with ICC in sub-Saharan Africa and implementation of HPV
vaccination may reduce the ICC disease burden in this region.GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SAhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1097-0215hb201
Cancer mortality patterns in Ghana: a 10-year review of autopsies and hospital mortality
BACKGROUND: Cancer mortality pattern in Ghana has not been reviewed since 1953, and there are no population-based data available for cancer morbidity and mortality patterns in Ghana due to the absence of a population-based cancer registry anywhere in the country. METHODS: A retrospective review of autopsy records of Department of Pathology, and medical certificate of cause of death books from all the wards of the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH), Accra, Ghana during the 10-year period 1991–2000 was done. RESULTS: The present study reviews 3659 cancer deaths at the KBTH over the 10-year period. The male-to-female ratio was 1.2:1. The mean age for females was 46.5 [Standard Deviation (SD), 20.8] years, whilst that of males was 47.8 (SD, 22.2) years. The median age was 48 years for females and 50 years for males.Both sexes showed a first peak in childhood, a drop in adolescence and young adulthood, and a second peak in the middle ages followed by a fall in the elderly, with the second peak occurring a decade earlier in females than in males. The commonest cause of cancer death in females was malignancies of the breast [Age-Standardized Cancer Ratio (ASCAR), 17.24%], followed closely by haematopoietic organs (14.69%), liver (10.97%) and cervix (8.47%). Whilst in males, the highest mortality was from the liver (21.15%), followed by prostate (17.35%), haematopoietic organs (15.57%), and stomach (7.26%). CONCLUSION: Considering the little information available on cancer patterns in Ghana, this combined autopsy and death certification data from the largest tertiary hospital is of considerable value in providing reliable information on the cancer patterns in Ghana