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Colorectal cancer in Egyptian patients under 40 years of age

โœ Scribed by Amr S. Soliman; Melissa L. Bondy; Bernard Levin; Mohamed R. Hamza; Kadry Ismail; Sohair Ismail; Hammam M. Hammam; Omar H. El-Hattab; Sanaa M. Kamal; Abdel-Ghani A. Soliman; Laila A. Dorgham; R. Susie McPherson; R. Palmer Beasley


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
French
Weight
55 KB
Volume
71
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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โœฆ Synopsis


Although colorectal cancer is not a common cancer in Egypt, the age distribution of the disease shows that a high proportion occurs in children and adults under 40 years of age. We reviewed the records of 1,608 colorectal cancer patients treated in 4 cancer hospitals in Egypt during a period of 3 to 10 years. The hospitals in which about 85% of all colorectal cancer cases in Egypt were seen included Egypt's 2 major cancer centers, The National Cancer Institute (NCI) in Cairo and Tanta Cancer Center (TCC) in the mid-Nile Delta region, and 2 major university hospitals, Assiut University in South Egypt and Ain Shams University in Cairo. Our review showed that patients younger than 40 years represented 35.6% of all patients in the 4 cancer hospitals, and that these rates were similar among the hospitals and for the years reviewed. The male-to-female ratio increased from 1.0 to 1.7 for the age groups ranging from 0-9 and 30-39 years, and increased from 1.0 to 1.5 for the age groups ranging from 40-49 to over 60 years. More than half of all the patients had rectal tumors, and about 90% of the cancers were adenocarcinomas; 30.6% of patients younger than 40 years, compared with 13.8% of older patients, had mucin-producing tumors. This study confirmed the occurrence of a high colorectal cancer rate in young Egyptians, and it opens the door to future epidemiologic studies to identify causes and risk factors of this disease pattern in Egypt.


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