Investigator

Dorothy Chilambe Lombe

Medical Lead · Palmerston North Hospital, Radiation Oncology

DCLDorothy Chilambe …
Papers(1)
Demographic and socia…
Collaborators(8)
Elizabeth Y. ChiaoGraciela M. Nogueras-…Mark F. MunsellMwando ChitulaSusan Citonge Msandam…Susan K. PetersonSwali FundafundaAhmed O. Elmehrath
Institutions(4)
Unknown InstitutionUniversity of Texas M…University Teaching H…Al Hayah University I…

Papers

Demographic and social determinants of human immunodeficiency virus status among women with cervical cancer in a low-resource setting.

Zambia faces one of the world's highest cervical cancer and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) burdens, yet how demographics and social determinants of health relate to HIV status among women with cervical cancer remains unclear. We conducted a prospective, Institutional Review Board-approved cross-sectional study of women aged ≥18 years with newly diagnosed cervical cancer at the Cancer Diseases Hospital in Lusaka, Zambia, from June 2022 to April 2025. Participants completed a culturally adapted Accountable Health Communities Health-Related Social Needs questionnaire. Demographic and social need variables were compared by HIV status, with associated factors evaluated via univariable and multi-variable logistic regression. Among 290 women, 160 (55.2%) were living with HIV. They were younger (median age 48 vs 53 years, p = .002), more often unmarried (49% vs 31%, p = .002), and more likely to live in urban areas (62% vs 43%, p = .003) than women living without HIV. They reported greater prior cervical cancer screening (48% vs 28%, p < .001) and knowledge (40% vs 25%, p = .008). Social needs were high across both groups: food insecurity (77%), transport barriers (82%), financial hardship (88%), loneliness (65%), and perceived stress (75%), with no HIV-related differences. In multi-variable analysis, younger age (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.76 per 5 years, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.66 to 0.87), unmarried status (aOR 3.06, 95% CI 1.79 to 5.35), urban residence (aOR 2.00, 95% CI 1.21 to 3.32), and prior knowledge of cervical cancer (aOR 1.86, 95% CI 1.08 to 3.23) were associated with HIV. No social need domain showed an independent association. In Zambian women with cervical cancer, HIV status is linked to demographic factors and cancer awareness, but not social needs, which were uniformly high across patients. This highlights the need to expand education and screening, especially for younger and unmarried women, and integrate socioeconomic support to improve outcomes in Zambia and similar high-burden settings.

20Works
1Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Medical Lead

Palmerston North Hospital · Radiation Oncology

2024–

Associate Dean Palmerston North

University of Otago

2021–

Consultant Radiation Oncologist

MidCentral District Health Board · Regional Cancer Treatment Services

2019–

Consultant Radiation oncologist - Brachytherapy

Cancer Diseases Hospital · Clinical Oncology

2018–

Clinical and research fellow

University of British Columbia · Surgery/ Radiation oncology

2011–

Senior House Officer

Cancer Diseases Hospital · Clinical Oncology

2010–

Senior House Officer

Kasama General Hospital

2008–

Junior House Officer

University Teaching Hospital

Education

2019

Clinical and Research Fellow Brachytherapy

BC Cancer Agency Kelowna Centre/ University of British Columbia · Radiation Oncology

2016

Master of Medicine

Stellenbosch University Faculty of Health Sciences · Radiation Oncology

2008

Medical Degree

Rostov Medical Univesity

Country

ZM

Links & IDs
0000-0002-5083-1801

Scopus: 57203447107