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Clinical profile of paediatric head and neck cancers at a tertiary hospital in Tanzania

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dc.creator Abraham, Zephania Saitabau
dc.creator Massawe, Enica Richard
dc.creator Kahinga, Aveline Aloyce
dc.creator Mapondella, Kassim Babu
dc.creator Massawe, Willybroad Augustine
dc.creator Swai, Henry
dc.creator Mithe, Siwillis
dc.creator Yahaya, James Joseph
dc.creator Ntunaguzi, Daudi
dc.date 2020-11-24T10:17:32Z
dc.date 2020-11-24T10:17:32Z
dc.date 2020
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T14:01:37Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T14:01:37Z
dc.identifier Abraham, Z. S., Massawe, E. R., Kahinga, A. A., Mapondella, K. B., Massawe, W. A., Swai, H., ... & Ntunaguzi, D. (2020). Clinical profile of paediatric head and neck cancers at a tertiary hospital in Tanzania. Rwanda Journal of Medicine and Health Sciences, 3(1), 11-20.
dc.identifier DOI:10.4314/rjmhs.v3i1.3
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2524
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2524
dc.description Full text article. Also available at https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/rjmhs.v3i1.3
dc.description Background: Paediatric head and neck cancers represent an important group of childhood cancers that require maximum attention at large. They are often diagnosed at advanced clinical stages at Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH). Objective: To describe the clinical profile of paediatric head and neck cancers at a tertiary hospital in Tanzania Method: A hospital based descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted involving 180 paediatric patients. Data were analyzed using SPSS program version 21. Results: A total of 180 paediatric patients were recruited where 61.1% were males and 38.9% were females. Majority belonged to the age group 0-5 years (53.9%). A total of 10 primary anatomical sites were found with the neck (cervical lymph node) predominating (36.1%), followed by the orbit/eye (34.4%) and the least anatomical sites were oral cavity (1.1%) and parapharyngeal space (0.5%). Leukocoria (93.9%), red eye (93.9%) and orbital cellulitis (77.6%) predominated in retinoblastoma but in patients with lymphomas, predominant features were night sweats (100%), weight loss (100%) and fevers (95.8%). Conclusion: The clinical profile depicted in this study appears to correlate with advanced clinical stages.
dc.language en
dc.publisher RBC / Rwanda Health Communication Centre
dc.subject Childhood cancers
dc.subject Paediatric cancers
dc.subject Neck cancers
dc.subject Head cancers
dc.subject Paediatric patients
dc.subject Paediatric oncology
dc.subject Pediatric cancers
dc.title Clinical profile of paediatric head and neck cancers at a tertiary hospital in Tanzania
dc.type Article


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