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Cancer research across Africa: a comparative bibliometric analysis

Authors :
Ajay Aggarwal
T Peter Kingham
Jennifer Moodley
Janet Seeley
Ophira Ginsburg
Surbhi Grover
Grant Lewison
Richard Sullivan
Verna Vanderpuye
Christian Ntizimira
Christopher Booth
Olusegun Isaac Alatise
Miriam Mutebi
Miska Cira
Julie Gralow
Serine Gueye
Benda Kithaka
Lofti Kochbati
Sulma Ibrahim Mohammed
Alex Mutombo
Ntokozo Ndlovu
Groesbeck Preer Parham
Fiona Walter
Jeannette Parkes
Delva Shamely
Nazik Hammad
Julie Torode
Source :
BMJ Global Health, Vol 7, Iss 11 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Research is a critical pillar in national cancer control planning. However, there is a dearth of evidence for countries to implement affordable strategies. The WHO and various Commissions have recommended developing stakeholder-based needs assessments based on objective data to generate evidence to inform national and regional prioritisation of cancer research needs and goals.Methodology Bibliometric algorithms (macros) were developed and validated to assess cancer research outputs of all 54 African countries over a 12-year period (2009–2020). Subanalysis included collaboration patterns, site and domain-specific focus of research and understanding authorship dynamics by both position and sex. Detailed subanalysis was performed to understand multiple impact metrics and context relative outputs in comparison with the disease burden as well as the application of a funding thesaurus to determine funding resources.Results African countries in total published 23 679 cancer research papers over the 12-year period (2009–2020) with the fractional African contribution totalling 16 201 papers and the remaining 7478 from authors from out with the continent. The total number of papers increased rapidly with time, with an annual growth rate of 15%. The 49 sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries together published just 5281 papers, of which South Africa’s contribution was 2206 (42% of the SSA total, 14% of all Africa) and Nigeria’s contribution was 997 (19% of the SSA total, 4% of all Africa). Cancer research accounted for 7.9% of all African biomedical research outputs (African research in infectious diseases was 5.1 times than that of cancer research). Research outputs that are proportionally low relative to their burden across Africa are paediatric, cervical, oesophageal and prostate cancer. African research mirrored that of Western countries in terms of its focus on discovery science and pharmaceutical research. The percentages of female researchers in Africa were comparable with those elsewhere, but only in North African and some Anglophone countries.Conclusions There is an imbalance in relevant local research generation on the continent and cancer control efforts. The recommendations articulated in our five-point plan arising from these data are broadly focused on structural changes, for example, overt inclusion of research into national cancer control planning and financial, for example, for countries to spend 10% of a notional 1% gross domestic expenditure on research and development on cancer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20597908 and 99929023
Volume :
7
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5a4b3ac537bc4d9992902387882ea1eb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009849