Abstract:
In resource- limited areas, such as sub-Saharan Africa, problems in accurate
cancer case ascertainment and enumeration of the at-risk population make it
difficult to estimate cancer incidence. We took advantage of a large well-
enumerated healthcare system to estimate the incidence of Kaposi sarcoma (KS),
a cancer which has become prominent in the HIV era and whose incidence
may be changing with the rollout of antiretroviral therapy (ART). To achieve
this, we evaluated HIV- infected adults receiving care between 2007 and 2012
at any of three medical centers in Kenya and Uganda that participate in the
East Africa International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA)
Consortium. Through IeDEA, clinicians received training in KS recognition and
biopsy equipment. We found that the overall prevalence of KS among 102,945
HIV- infected adults upon clinic enrollment was 1.4%; it declined over time at
the largest site. Among 140,552 patients followed for 319,632 person-years, the
age- standardized incidence rate was 334/100,000 person-years (95% CI: 314–
354/100,000 person- years). Incidence decreased over time and was lower in
women, persons on ART, and those with higher CD4 counts. The incidence
rate among patients on ART with a CD4 count >350 cells/mm3 was 32/100,000
person- years (95% CI: 14–70/100,000 person-years). Despite reductions over
time coincident with the expansion of ART, KS incidence among HIV-infected
adults in East Africa equals or exceeds the most common cancers in resource-
replete settings. In resource-limited settings, strategic efforts to improve cancer
diagnosis in combination with already well-enumerated at- risk denominators
can make healthcare systems attractive platforms for estimating cancer
incidence.Cancer incidence is one of the most fundamental param-
eters in cancer epidemiology. Incidence encompasses both
the natural history of a malignancy and the effects of
interventions to reduce occurrence [1]. Accurate estimates
of cancer incidence are vital elements in ascertaining the
etiology of cancers, planning for public health burden,
and monitoring the effects of interventions. In resource-
rich settings, given the better equipped medical infrastruc-
ture, virtually all instances of cancer are diagnosed and
recorded. These diagnoses are then placed into contextof the underlying denominator of persons at risk by the
creation of incidence rates [2]. The denominators are
typically derived from municipally funded complete enu-
merations (i.e., a census) of geographic populations. In
contrast, in resource-limited settings, such as sub-Saharan
Africa, there is limited infrastructure for cancer diagnosis,
and even when diagnosed, not all cancers are formally
recorded [3]. Further, there are challenges in enumerating
the denominator from which cancers arise. The WHO-
sponsored Cancer Incidence in Five (“CI5”) Continents
project deemed only 4 out of 25 registries from countries
in sub-Saharan Africa to have sufficient quality [4, 5],
and even within these countries, there are issues in both
ascertainment of total cancer cases and the underlying
denominator.
Kaposi sarcoma (KS) is an example of a malignancy
in a resource- limited setting which would benefit from
knowledge about incidence. From a perspective of
percentage of all recorded cancers, KS was among the
most common cancers in sub-Saharan Africa even before
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic [6,
7], and it experienced explosive growth as HIV infection
spread [8, 9]. The clinical relevance of KS includes both
cosmetic disfigurement and considerable morbidity and
mortality. In persons untreated for HIV, 1-year mortality
after KS diagnosis in sub-Saharan Africa is 60% to 70%
[10, 11]. Even among persons treated with antiretroviral
therapy (ART), those with KS have about a fourfold higher
rate of death [12]. In resource-rich settings, ART has
substantially reduced KS incidence, but because of the
lack of robust sources of incidence data, the status in
sub- Saharan Africa is less clear aside from an initial report
from South Africa [13]. As is true for many cancers,
changes in KS incidence in resource- replete settings cannot
necessarily be extrapolated to resource-limited ones.
Differences between settings regarding the strain of the
etiologic viral agent (Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvi-
rus, KSHV), ambient HIV strains, human host, and poten-
tially other environmental cofactors dictate that KS
incidence must be directly measured in Africa for it to
be relevant.
To overcome the challenges inherent in a resource-
limited setting, we used a newly assembled collection
of healthcare system-derived databases, the International
Epidemiological Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA)
Consortium in East Africa, to derive a well-substantiated
(in terms of numerator and denominator) estimate of
cancer incidence in a large representative population of
HIV-infected adults in sub-Saharan Africa. We focused
on KS, not only because of its ease of measurement
and clinical relevance, but also to demonstrate how add-
ing the selective measurements to an already well-
enumerated healthcare system-based population has the potential to be a powerful platform for the study of
other cancers.