Cancer patients in developing countries must overcome the obstacles of inadequate infrastructure for treatment and lack of follow-up even as they contend with the disease itself, said experts at a radiation therapy conference tackling these issues.
Leading radiation oncologists and researchers met in Hamilton in late September to discuss the burden of cancer in the developing world and the role of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Delegates attended from Canada, the US, India, South Africa, Brazil, Croatia, China and Sudan.
Cancer of the cervix is the most common cancer in women in developing countries, followed by tobacco-related cancers (esophageal, head and neck) in the so-called Esophageal Cancer Belt of South–Central Asia, which covers northern Iran, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, and stretches into northern China. People living there have 20 times more likely to develop esophageal cancer than Europeans and North Americans.
Pharmaceutical companies aggressively push chemotherapy drugs in developing countries, said Dr. Ranjan Sur, a radiation oncologist at Hamilton's Juravinski Cancer Centre. Delegates to the conference questioned the drugs' worth in treating patients with advanced esophageal cancer.
Unlike Western cancer patients, who are in generally good condition and weigh about 80 kg, patients in developing countries may weigh as little as 27 kilograms, be totally dehydrated and lack muscle mass.
“When you're talking about 6 or 7 weeks of aggressive radiation treatment with chemotherapy — for what?” Sur asked.
Patients in developing countries also face a shortage of radiation oncologists, with 1 professional for every 400–800 patients, compared with the 1:220 ratio in North America.
Radiology equipment is also overloaded. Cobalt machines “that we would think are appropriate for 100 patients, they would look on as appropriate for 500 patients,” said Sur. “Machines work 24 hours a day in some centres around the world where there are only 1 or 2 units.”
Conducting research in developing countries is not easy, and patient follow-up is a huge problem. In Colombo, Sri Lanka, for example, patients travel up to 2 days to visit a cancer centre. Many can't afford a train ticket to return, so cancer centres pay the patients out of the money the IAEA gives the centres for cancer research studies. — Suzanne Morrison, Oakville, Ont.