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Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria
Anaemia is a common complication of myelo-suppressive chemotherapy. Severe anaemia is usually treated with red blood cell transfusion, however, mild-to-moderate anaemia are most often managed conservatively. There is no universally established benchmark for haemoglobin of patients selected for cance...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7755.disp19-d066 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2804125 |
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author | Aruah, Simeon Chinedu Oyesegun, Rasaq Ogbe, Oche Ezikeanyi, Sampson Aniwada, Elias Dosanjh, Manjit Wroe, Laurence Coleman, Norman |
author_facet | Aruah, Simeon Chinedu Oyesegun, Rasaq Ogbe, Oche Ezikeanyi, Sampson Aniwada, Elias Dosanjh, Manjit Wroe, Laurence Coleman, Norman |
author_sort | Aruah, Simeon Chinedu |
collection | CERN |
description | Anaemia is a common complication of myelo-suppressive chemotherapy. Severe anaemia is usually treated with red blood cell transfusion, however, mild-to-moderate anaemia are most often managed conservatively. There is no universally established benchmark for haemoglobin of patients selected for cancer chemotherapy to guide a global best practice and enhance patients treatment outcome and their quality of life. Objective: The objective of this study is to examine the change in Hb levels of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy measuring Hb after treatment. Materials & Methods: A total of 100 voluntary patients with solid malignancies were recruited within a period of eight (8) months. Baseline demographic characteristics and type of tumours were documented. Pre-treatment Hb level was measured on the first day of consultation and repeated every 2 weeks during and after the therapy until after three consecutive Hb readings (6 weeks). Results & Analysis: All data were analysed using IBM statistical package for Social Science (SPSS) version 20. 88 of the 100 cancer patients were female. Breast 68% (68) was the commonest site of tumour. Prevalence of anaemia in the study was 72% and majority of the patients had their Hb within the range of 9.60 g/dl to 10.62 g/dl at the end of their treatment. At P-value >0.05 and standard deviation there was no statistical significance on distribution of mean haemoglobin values, were independent of sex and type of treatment. Conclusion and Recommendation: Our results show that chemotherapy has no significant effect on Hb level between 11 g/dl to 12 g/dl. Prevalence of anaemia in the cohort of patients was 72%. We recommend a benchmark minimum of Hb of 11 g/dl for all patients being selected for chemotherapy in Nigeria. |
id | cern-2804125 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2020 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-28041252022-10-31T15:36:45Zdoi:10.1158/1538-7755.disp19-d066http://cds.cern.ch/record/2804125engAruah, Simeon ChineduOyesegun, RasaqOgbe, OcheEzikeanyi, SampsonAniwada, EliasDosanjh, ManjitWroe, LaurenceColeman, NormanAbstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, NigeriaHealth Physics and Radiation EffectsAnaemia is a common complication of myelo-suppressive chemotherapy. Severe anaemia is usually treated with red blood cell transfusion, however, mild-to-moderate anaemia are most often managed conservatively. There is no universally established benchmark for haemoglobin of patients selected for cancer chemotherapy to guide a global best practice and enhance patients treatment outcome and their quality of life. Objective: The objective of this study is to examine the change in Hb levels of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy measuring Hb after treatment. Materials & Methods: A total of 100 voluntary patients with solid malignancies were recruited within a period of eight (8) months. Baseline demographic characteristics and type of tumours were documented. Pre-treatment Hb level was measured on the first day of consultation and repeated every 2 weeks during and after the therapy until after three consecutive Hb readings (6 weeks). Results & Analysis: All data were analysed using IBM statistical package for Social Science (SPSS) version 20. 88 of the 100 cancer patients were female. Breast 68% (68) was the commonest site of tumour. Prevalence of anaemia in the study was 72% and majority of the patients had their Hb within the range of 9.60 g/dl to 10.62 g/dl at the end of their treatment. At P-value >0.05 and standard deviation there was no statistical significance on distribution of mean haemoglobin values, were independent of sex and type of treatment. Conclusion and Recommendation: Our results show that chemotherapy has no significant effect on Hb level between 11 g/dl to 12 g/dl. Prevalence of anaemia in the cohort of patients was 72%. We recommend a benchmark minimum of Hb of 11 g/dl for all patients being selected for chemotherapy in Nigeria.oai:cds.cern.ch:28041252020 |
spellingShingle | Health Physics and Radiation Effects Aruah, Simeon Chinedu Oyesegun, Rasaq Ogbe, Oche Ezikeanyi, Sampson Aniwada, Elias Dosanjh, Manjit Wroe, Laurence Coleman, Norman Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title | Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title_full | Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title_fullStr | Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title_full_unstemmed | Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title_short | Abstract D066: A prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at National Hospital Abuja, Nigeria |
title_sort | abstract d066: a prospective study on chemotherapy-induced anemia using serial hemoglobin measurement in cancer patients undergoing treatment at national hospital abuja, nigeria |
topic | Health Physics and Radiation Effects |
url | https://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7755.disp19-d066 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2804125 |
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