JCO Global Oncology (Jun 2023)

Status of Government-Funded Radiotherapy Services in Nigeria

  • Simeon C. Aruah,
  • Runcie C.W. Chidebe,
  • Tochukwu C. Orjiakor,
  • Fatima Uba,
  • Uchechukwu N. Shagaya,
  • Charles Ugwanyi,
  • Aisha A. Umar,
  • Taofeeq Ige,
  • Obinna C. Asogwa,
  • Oiza T. Ahmadu,
  • Musa Ali-Gombe,
  • Alabi Adewumi,
  • Vitalis C. Okwor,
  • Jimoh A. Mutiu,
  • Basheer Bello,
  • Lucy O. Eriba,
  • Yusuf A. Ahmed,
  • Awwal Bisalla,
  • Ukamaka Itanyi,
  • Ramatallah A. Balogun,
  • Suleiman Alabi,
  • David Pistenmaa,
  • C. Norman Coleman,
  • Dosanjh Manjit

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.22.00406
Journal volume & issue
no. 9

Abstract

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PURPOSEAccess to radiotherapy (RT) is now one of the stark examples of global cancer inequities. More than 800,000 new cancer cases require potentially curative or palliative RT services in Africa, arguably <15% of these patients currently have access to this important service. For a population of more than 206 million, Nigeria requires a minimum of 280 RT machines for the increasing number of cancer cases. Painfully, the country has only eight Government-funded RT machines. This study aimed to evaluate the status of the eight Government-funded RT services in Nigeria and their ability to deliver effective RT to their patients.METHODSA survey addressing 10 critical areas was used to assess the eight Government-funded RT services in Nigeria.RESULTSUnfortunately, six of the eight centers (75%) surveyed have not treated patients with RT because they do not have functioning teletherapy machines in 2021. Only two RT centers have the capability of treating patients using advanced RT techniques. There is no positron emission tomography-computed tomography scan in any of the Government-funded RT centers. The workforce capacity and infrastructure across the eight centers are limited. All of the centers lack residency training programs for medical physicists and radiation therapy technologists resulting in very few well-trained staff.CONCLUSIONAs the Nigerian Government plans for the new National Cancer Control Plan, there is an urgent need to scale up access to RT by upgrading the RT equipment, workforce, and infrastructure to meet the current needs of Nigerian patients with cancer. Although the shortfall is apparent from a variety of RT-capacity databases, this detailed analysis provides essential information for an implementation plan involving solutions from within Nigeria and with global partners.