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Volume 6, Issue 8(Suppl)

J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2016

ISSN:2161-069X JGDS, an open access journal

Page 70

Digestive Diseases 2016

December 08-09, 2016

conferenceseries

.com

Digestive Diseases

December 08-09, 2016 Dubai, UAE

International Conference on

J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2016, 6:8(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-069X.C1.047

Cancer in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)

Tshimpi Antoine

1

and

Kayembe J M

2

1

University Clinics of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

2

Clinique Marie-Yvette, Democratic Republic of the Congo

I

n the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), cancer kills more than tuberculosis, AIDS and malaria combined. Its prevalence is

rising steadily as in the rest of the world. In the West, cancer, the leading cause of death, is responsible for more than half of the

deaths, even if it is declining. In 2008, nearly 44% of deaths in hospitals in the DRC were due to cancer according to the Ministry

of Health. This steady rise in prevalence concerns chronic noncommunicable diseases, among which cancer takes a large place.

Favorable factors include dietary habits, lifestyle changes, etc. In fact, cancer results from the combination of several factors, some

of which are preventable, such as smoking, alcohol abuse, exposure to infections such as AIDS, hepatitis B and C, papillomavirus

Exposure to cervical and anal cancer, abuse in the consumption of fats, lack of physical exercise, non-consumption of vegetables and

fruits. This world scourge spares no one because of age, sex, race, religion, wealth or poverty. It must be considered as a major public

health problem. The most frequent cancers in man affect the lungs, the prostate, the colon; and in the woman, the breasts, the lungs,

the colon. On the digestive level, in the DRC, the rise appears to be regular for cancers of the liver, stomach, large intestine, rectum;

Perhaps contributing to a life expectancy of the Congolese (51) among the lowest in the world, lower than the African average (56

years), very far from the French figures (78 years for men and 83 years for women). It is estimated that nearly 12.4% of the 804

million people in the African Region will develop cancer before reaching the age of 75 years. The risk increases with age, and 90% of

cancer cases will occur after the age of 40 years. If action were taken immediately, there could be an annual saving of some 100,000

lives by 2020. Indeed, two thirds of cancers are curable, provided they organize screening and diagnosis at an early stage, and to

benefit from the appropriate treatments. The absence in the DRC of a national cancer registry, statistics and a formal cancer control

program is a shortcoming that needs to be corrected quickly. We must therefore work towards a national awareness of the reality of

cancer; the commitment of the Ministry of Public Health in the fight against cancer is unavoidable. According to the WHO Regional

Director for Africa: "Governments and development partners have a shared responsibility to raise awareness to dispel prejudices and

preconceptions about cancer and to promote change in Life and behavior related to the risk factors of this disease ". There is a need for

the DRC to organize care in oncology. This implies: 1. Training of health professionals in the management of cancer; 2. Development

of structures adapted to the management of cancer; 3. Information campaigns aimed at the general public; 4. Mobilization of financial

resources; 5. Access to anti-cancer drugs, perhaps in the anti-retroviral model for HIV. In conclusion, cancer represents in DRC, an

increasingly important cost, in terms of human lives; it becomes urgent to organize its care.

antshimpi@aol.com