Cervical Cancer Outcomes in Mozambique: Impact of an International Gynecologic Oncology Training Program

Ricardina Rangeiro & Mila P. Salcedo et al. · 2025-06-11

PURPOSE

Cervical cancer is the most common cancer among women in Mozambique and is a major health burden. Surgery for cervical cancer is currently performed at only one hospital in the country, Maputo Central Hospital. Before 2020, there were no gynecologists in Mozambique trained to care for women with cervical cancer. In 2017, the International Gynecologic Cancer Society (IGCS) started a gynecologic oncology training program in Mozambique, and in 2020, the first three fellows graduated from this program. The main objective of this study was to report the outcomes of patients with cervical cancer who were treated surgically by the three newly trained Mozambican gynecologic oncologists.

METHODS

We performed a retrospective chart review of women diagnosed with cervical cancer who underwent surgical treatment by the Mozambican gynecologic oncologists between November 2020 and October 2022. The outcome of interest was survival at 2 years.

RESULTS

Thirty-three patients underwent radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy for cervical cancer treatment. The median age at diagnosis was 43 years. After surgery, 15 patients (45%) were dispositioned to surveillance and 18 (55%) were referred for adjuvant treatment with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. All patients had follow-up data available, with a median follow-up time of 19 months (range, 0.2 to 37.5). Only one patient died, and the overall survival is 95.7% (95% CI, 87.7% to 100%) at 12.7 months.

CONCLUSION

The IGCS program has provided training to physicians at Maputo Central Hospital, resulting in surgery for cervical cancer being available to patients in Mozambique. This is an important step in the global elimination of cervical cancer.

TL;DR

The IGCS program has provided training to physicians at Maputo Central Hospital, resulting in surgery for cervical cancer being available to patients in Mozambique, resulting in an important step in the global elimination of cervical cancer.

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Funding
Cancer Center Support Grant

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA016672