Background
The Gaza Strip, a narrow land located in the southern part of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), is an overcrowded area with a population of 1.8 million people (i.e., 5000 persons per km
2) [
1]. Although most of the population in the Gaza Strip has a challengeable life, with a high rate of poverty - 74% of families were estimated to live below the poverty line [
2,
3] - life expectancy at birth reaches 71.5 years in males and 74.4 years in females [
4]. Cancer is the second most common cause of death, after cardiovascular diseases, and it accounts for 20% of the whole expenditure for drugs [
5,
6].
In the OPT, two population-based cancer registries were established in 1996 by the Palestinian Ministry of Health (MoH) -one in the West Bank, and one in the Gaza Strip [
4]. Given the geopolitical context of the Gaza Strip [
7,
8], the data collection process cannot fully reflect the whole cancer burden in the area. As a consequence, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recently given support to the Palestinian MoH in improving cancer registration [
8]. Of all cases recorded between 2005 and 2014, breast cancer (BC) was the most common cancer among women (26.0% -skin cancers included), while colorectal cancer (CRC) was the second most common cancer in men (9.7% of all cases).
The Italian MoH promoted the “EUROMED Cancer Network” with the general aim to support extra-European Union Mediterranean countries in the development of effective anti-cancer programs [
9,
10]. The ongoing collaboration with the Gaza Cancer Registry (GCR) was conducted by the National Cancer Institute “Centro di Riferimento Oncologico”, Aviano (notheastern Italy); the Italian network of cancer registries (AIRTUM); and the Italian National Health Institute (ISS), Rome.
Herein, we describe the general characteristics and the crude survival experience of patients diagnosed with BC or with CRC between 2005 and 2014 in the Gaza Strip. Furthermore, as selected clinical data were available only for cases diagnosed in 2005–2006, we estimated the risks of death for patients with BC or CRC according to type of therapy, disease, grade, or stage.
Methods
Study population
We described the general characteristics and the cancer survival experience of people living in the Gaza Strip, diagnosed with BC or CRC in 2005–2014, according to the information recorded in the population-based GCR. Cancer Registries are identified as collectors of personal data for surveillance purposes without the need of explicit individual consent. The approval of a research ethic committee is not required because neither direct nor indirect intervention on patients took place. Nonetheless, the General Director of the Primary Health Care, MoH, (Dr. Fouad Elissawi) cleared the use of the registry data for study purposes. The data collection process used by GCR is an active one, carried on by GCR trained personnel who regularly visit the pathology departments and oncology clinics to collect newly detected cases and to update the already recorded ones. The update of the vital status is manually checked by means of the death registry.
For the aims of this analysis, to ensure data validity, each case was reviewed by a member of the GCR and co-author of this article (FE). The vital status and – eventually – the date of death were ascertained from the death registration database at Palestinian MoH. The last follow-up time was December 31st, 2016. Overall, from 2005 to 2014, 1495 women were diagnosed with BC (no cases of BC were recorded in men during the study period), and 878 people were diagnosed with CRC. This analysis was restricted to 1360 BC and 722 CRC patients after exclusion of: cases lacking the full date of birth (7 BCs and 21 CRCs); children under 15 years of age (2 BCs and 3 CRCs); and those patients with coincident dates of diagnosis and death (126 cases of BC and 132 cases of CRC).
Information on therapy, grade, and stage of disease was available for cases diagnosed in 2005–2006 only (i.e., 178 cases of BC and 80 cases of CRC). Accordingly, for these cases a multivariate analysis was conducted to estimate the risk of death.
Statistical methods
The crude survival time was calculated as the time elapsed from date of cancer diagnosis to date of death, or to end of follow-up –whichever came first. At univariate analysis, the survival time for the totality of BC or CRC patients diagnosed from 2005 to 2014 was estimated by means of the Kaplan-Meier method [
11].
For cases diagnosed in 2005–2006 only, a multivariate analysis was carried out to statistically assess the role of selected clinical variables on survival. To this end, hazard ratios (HRs) for all-cause mortality, and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), were estimated using the Cox proportional hazard model adjusted for age at diagnosis (< 35, 35–44, 45–54, 55–64, 65–74, 75+ years) and gender, as appropriate [
12]. The proportional hazard assumption was assessed through Schoenfeld residuals, including interactions with follow-up time [
12].
Discussion
Female BC and CRC are among the most common cancers diagnosed every year worldwide in both more- and less-developed WHO regions [
13]. These cancers are very common also in the Gaza Strip, where the present study attempted -for the first time- to estimate the survival of people diagnosed with cancer in the Gaza Strip. Our findings indicate that 65.1% of women with BC, and 50.2% of patients with CRC were alive after 5 years from diagnosis. In the subgroup of patients with available clinical information, the majority of patients were diagnosed at an advanced stage.
In agreement with our results, a Jordanian study disclosed a five-year survival for BC patients of 59.3%, showing that grade and stage had a significant effect on survival rates [
14]. Mean age at breast cancer diagnosis was similar in Jordan [
14], in Egypt [
15], and in the Gaza Strip. The median survival time after BC in Egypt (i.e., 83.8 months) was equal to the estimate in the Gaza Strip (i.e., 83.7 months) [
15] in 2005–2006. Furthermore, in Uganda 5-year survival probability was between 50 and 60% after a BC diagnosis, and in particular women with the luminal B sub-type had a 5-year survival around 30%. A possible explanation of these results could be the small sample size [
16].
Concerning survival after CRC, a study conducted in Israel among Bedouin Arab and Jewish patients with CRC is worth mentioning [
17]. The five-year overall survival was about 65% in both ethnic groups. However, the mean age at diagnosis was lower for the Bedouin Arab population (i.e., 57 years) than for the Jewish population (i.e., 69 years), pointing to a survival disadvantage for the Bedouin Arab ethnic group [
17]. The 40% five-year survival for patients living in the Gaza Strip indicated a greater disadvantage in comparison with both Israeli ethnic groups.
The comparison of data from the GCR with those from highly-developed countries highlighted substantial differences. In the Gaza Strip, the percentage of BC patients with localized disease at diagnosis was about half than that recorded in most European countries, and similar to the picture described in eastern European countries [
18]. For CRC cases, the proportion of localized diseases in the Gaza Strip was about two-fold higher than that documented by Italian cancer registries [
19]. With respect to treatment, the proportion of patients in the Gaza Strip who underwent chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy was higher than the proportion of Italian patients (88% vs. 39 and 28% vs. 10%, respectively).
In contrast with widely available estimates of cancer incidence rates, survival estimates at population level in less developed countries -including the WHO EMR- are less common [
20]. The 5-year raw survival after BC varied substantially, from 38.8% in Setif (Algeria) [
20] to 71.1% in Izmir, Turkey, in women diagnosed from 1995 to 1997 and followed-up to 2003, or to 61.3% in Saudi Arabia, among women diagnosed in 1994–1996 and followed-up to 2001 [
21]. Similar variations emerged, at population level for survival after CRC diagnosis, from a raw 5-year survival of nearly 23% in Setif to 52% in Izmir [
20].
Among the study strengths, the survival of cancer patients living in the Gaza Strip was assessed at a population level, while other studies were previously conducted in clinical setting [
22,
23]; moreover, we described the heterogeneity survival. On the other hand, accuracy and completeness of data collection, in this study, might have suffered of potential limitations. With regards to the accuracy of information, the data from the GCR may have suffered of limitations due to the socio-economic situation and to the conflicts in the Gaza Strip, which may have limited the activity of the health personnel working in the West Bank and in Gaza. Furthermore, because of cultural taboos (e.g., negative and false perception toward cancer patients with a consequent isolation from family members), cancer patients tend to conceal their disease, which hinders their access to local hospitals. Concerning completeness, although cancer registration in the Gaza Strip started in 1996, it still faces several obstacles such as lack of appropriate hardware and software, insufficient staff, and training of health personnel. All these concerns represent key issues in the accurate assessment of the cancer burden in the Gaza Strip.
Notwithstanding this lack of completeness, our study results represent one of the first attempts to provide updated indications on the state of oncologic health care in the Gaza Strip. Moreover, it tries to address the problematic cancer care situation in this population.
The closure policy of the Gaza Strip for security reasons has caused an isolation of Gaza citizens. This isolation has affected the possibility to have adequate cancer care for many cancer patients living in the Gaza Strip. In particular, the denial or delay of permits to travel outside Gaza Strip for cancer patients referred to its two neighbouring countries (namely, Israel and Egypt) limits the opportunity of adequate diagnosis and/or treatment. Moreover, a number of antineoplastic medications are denied to patients due to the embargo [
5,
24].