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Epidemiology of malignant hemopathies recorded in hospitals in Cameroon.

Data about malignant blood diseases are sparse in Cameroon. Their epidemiology was studied in patients at the General Hospital of Douala (GHD) and the Yaoundé Central Hospital (CHY) from 2004 through 2014. The variables we studied were social and demographic (age, sex, occupation, marital status), clinical (reasons for consultation, clinical signs, year of diagnosis), and biological (blood count, myelogram and blood smear, immunophenotyping, biopsy, and cytogenetics). In all, 4409 files were reviewed and 454 cases identified, documented and confirmed (248 in GHD and 206 in CHY). The prevalence of malignant blood diseases was 10.4%. The patients' mean age was 44.3 ± 19 [range : 1-80] years and the M/F sex ratio 1.4/1. In 32.2% of the cases, the patient consulted because of a tumor. The most frequent malignant blood diseases, in decreasing order, were non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (31.1%), chronic myeloid leukemia (21.4%), chronic lymphoid leukemia (12.6%), multiple myeloma (11.2%), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (7.4%), and acute myeloblastic leukemia (6.4%). Their incidence by age group showed that acute lymphoblastic leukemia was most common among children (20%), and chronic myeloid leukemia among young adults (28.9%). The main hemogram abnormalities were anemia (73.7%), hyperleukocytosis (57.3%), and thrombopenia (39.2%). Various types of malignant blood diseases thus exist in the hospital environment in Cameroon, and their forms are underdiagnosed.

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