Investigator

Shalini Vinod

UNSW Sydney, South West Sydney Clinical Campuses, Faculty of Medicine & Health

SVShalini Vinod
Papers(1)
Cervical cancer treat…
Collaborators(10)
Siqi ZhangSurbhi GroverDoreen Ramogola-MasireErle RobertsonKaren CanfellLilie L. LinMemory Bvochora-NsingoNatalie TaylorRohini K. BhatiaSalman Khan
Institutions(10)
Unsw SydneyUniversity of Pennsyl…University Of Pennsyl…University Of BotswanaUniversity of SydneyThe University Of Tex…Cw Private HospitalUNSW SydneyWinship Cancer Instit…Pennsylvania Departme…

Papers

Cervical cancer treatment outcomes and survival in Botswana by human immunodeficiency virus status: Ipabalele study results

Abstract Background Cervical cancer is a leading morbidity/mortality cause, frequently co-occurring with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positivity, in Botswana. We examined long-term outcomes for Ipabalele study participants receiving curative chemoradiation for locally advanced cervical cancer (2015-2019) by HIV status. Methods Clinical and outcome data were collected at baseline, treatment completion, and 3 months thereafter. Patients were followed for up to 5 years. Overall survival (OS) was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression. Results The cohort comprised 295 patients (73.8% with HIV, younger at diagnosis [P < .001]) followed for a median of 44.2 months. Complete response was seen in 217/278 (76.1%) patients. Two- and 5-year OS rates were 73.4% and 59.9%, respectively, with no difference by HIV status. OS was associated negatively with advanced disease stage (III: hazard ratio [HR] 13.23, P < .001; IV: HR 7.8, P = .008) and positively with increased radiation (HR 0.977, P = .0005) and chemotherapy (HR 0.85, P = .005). Clinical response was associated negatively with advanced disease (IV: HR 0.113, P = .002) and positively with increased radiation (P = .009). Toxicity did not differ by HIV status. The most common grade-≥-2 non-hematological and hematological toxicities were radiation dermatitis (39.8%) and reduced white blood cell count (66.05%), respectively. Conclusions In this cervical cancer cohort with good HIV status control, treatment outcomes and OS were associated with disease and treatment factors, not the HIV status. Early screening and education regarding treatment protocols are crucial to improve cervical cancer outcomes in Botswana.

1Papers
11Collaborators
Lung NeoplasmsNeoplasm StagingNeoplasmsUterine Cervical NeoplasmsThoracic NeoplasmsSmall Cell Lung CarcinomaHIV Infections

Positions

Researcher

UNSW Sydney · South West Sydney Clinical Campuses, Faculty of Medicine & Health

Country

AU

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