ecancermedicalscience

Review

Barriers to optimal management of cancer pain in sub-Saharan Africa: a scoping review

Vivian Onyinyechukwu Magboh1, Ogheneochuko Andrew Saba2, Rene Krause3 and Patrice Forget4

1School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3FX Aberdeen, UK

226 Charlotte Street, AB25 1LQ Aberdeen, UK

3Division of Interdisciplinary Palliative Care and Medicine, Department of Family, Community and Emergency Care, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Observatory 7925, South Africa

4Epidemiology Group, School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition, Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB25 2ZD Aberdeen, UK


Abstract

Background: Although cancer is a significant issue in sub-Saharan Africa, and cancer pain is prevalent, there is insufficient data and research on the barriers to cancer pain management. Even in countries where evidence exists, few studies explore the links between these barriers, which makes it difficult to implement system-wide approaches to address them.

Methods: The search strategy was developed and conducted on databases including MEDLINE, Embase and Web of Science to identify peer-reviewed studies. Then, these retrieved studies were screened systematically to select papers that had met pre-specified criteria. The barriers were categorised into patient-, health professional- and health system-level domains. Then, the quality of the included papers was assessed using the mixed methods appraisal tool. Finally, a narrative synthesis was utilised to summarise the findings.

Results: Fourteen relevant articles from 19 sub-Saharan African countries were included in the scoping review. All the studies highlighted barriers to optimal cancer pain management. Healthcare system-related domains had the most frequently reported barriers. Approximately half of the included studies met 100% of the methodological quality criteria in the critical appraisal.

Conclusion: Improving pain management for cancer patients in sub-Saharan Africa requires further high-level research evidence on regulatory policies and interventional strategies, especially at the health system level, as most barriers to cancer pain treatment essentially stem from the healthcare system.

Keywords: cancer, pain, barriers, cancer pain management, sub-Saharan Africa

Correspondence to: Vivian Onyinyechukwu Magboh
Email: annamagboh@gmail.com

Published: 20/12/2023
Received: 30/09/2023

Publication costs for this article were supported by ecancer (UK Charity number 1176307).

Copyright: © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


Background

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), cancers are one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality globally, with approximately 18.1 million new cases and 9.6 million deaths in 2018 [1]. In sub-Saharan Africa, cancer is a significant public health problem affecting about 1 billion of its population, with an estimated 801,392 new cases and 520,158 deaths as of 2020 [2].

Pain is ‘an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated or resembling that associated with actual or potential tissue damage’ [3]. It is multidimensional and complex, involving physical, psychological, spiritual and emotional factors [4]. Cancer-related pain is described as pain associated with the cancer itself, treatment modality or adverse effects of the treatment [5, 6]. It is now a well-described entity, recognised by the WHO in the 11th International Classification of Disease (ICD-11) [7]. Cancer pain is one of the most prevalent and debilitating symptoms and is estimated to be the first presenting complaint in about 30% of cancer patients [8, 9].

The WHO guiding principles for cancer pain management state that the goal of optimum pain management is reducing pain to levels that permit an acceptable quality of life [1]. Alternative interventions for improving the adequacy of cancer pain relief exist; however, pharmacological therapy remains the mainstay of treating cancer pain [1]. In 1984, the WHO analgesic ladder was developed to guide adequate cancer pain management. This ladder advocated for initiating pain medication stepwise and was created based on the fundamental principle for pain management – ‘By mouth, by clock, by individual’ [10]. However, not all research agrees with a simplified approach due to the multicomplexes of cancer pain. Some evidence argues that pain assessment and severity score should generally be considered when prescribing analgesics to ensure optimal pain control in cancer patients. Thus, the analgesic ladder has recently been re-debated, with the alternative being a more comprehensive strategy [1, 11].

Despite these scientific debates, barriers to cancer pain relief remain a problem worldwide, especially in resource-limited regions due to cultural, political and socio-economic complexities associated with health outcomes and service delivery [5, 12]. Sub-Saharan Africa faces unique challenges in cancer pain management due to various multifaceted factors such as limited funding for palliative care services, inadequate healthcare infrastructure and lack of trained healthcare professionals [13]. Furthermore, inadequate accessibility and availability of opioids remain a significant problem in this region because of strict regulatory measures [13, 14]. Thus, potential solutions would require a critical analysis of the already existing linkages between these barriers reported in literature and system-level thinking to address them holistically.

There is no systematic or scoping review of the barriers to optimal cancer pain management in sub-Saharan Africa. Hence, this scoping review aims to provide an overview of reported barriers to cancer pain management in sub-Saharan Africa and linkages between these barriers. It will also highlight areas where further research is needed, allowing policymakers, healthcare providers and researchers to focus their efforts and resources on addressing those gaps. This review sought to answer three key research questions:

1. What is the existing evidence on sub-Saharan Africa's reported barriers to cancer pain management?

2. What connections between these barriers exist in literature?

3. What are the opportunities for intervention and further research to optimise cancer pain management in sub-Saharan Africa?


Methods

This scoping review was conducted between May 2023 and July 2023. The reporting of the scoping review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis Extension for Scoping Reviews guidelines [15]. While the guidelines encourage a ‘review registration’ step and writing of a protocol, these were not done since scoping reviews cannot be registered in the PROSPERO database. Additionally, summary measures, risk of bias and additional analyses sections were not included because these are not applicable to scoping reviews.

Eligibility criteria

For an article to be eligible for review, it had to:

1. Discuss existing evidence on barriers to the optimal management of cancer pain in sub-Saharan Africa.

2. Discuss barriers to opioid availability and accessibility for cancer pain in sub-Saharan Africa.

3. Be a peer-reviewed primary study.

4. Be conducted in an adult population.

5. Be published in English.

6. Be published from January 2000 to 4th of July 2023.

Information sources

To conduct a literature search for systematic reviews, some researchers recommend the use of at least three database combinations [16]. Accordingly, three electronic databases containing millions of references from health-related journals namely Embase, MEDLINE and Web of Science (WoS) were searched to identify relevant articles.

Search strategy

A comprehensive online database search was done on MEDLINE, Embase and WoS to identify peer-reviewed primary studies. These searches were conducted in July of 2023. Keywords such as cancer pain, barriers, pain management, pain control, pain relief, Africa and south of Sahara Africa were used. This strategy was applied uniformly across all databases. The full search strategy can be viewed in Appendix 1. The complete search and screening process is depicted in Figure 1.

Selection of sources of evidence

After a final search on each database, 348 articles were exported to RefWorks, 77 duplicate reports were eliminated and the titles and abstracts were assessed for eligibility. Two researchers independently did a two-staged screening, and the project supervisor resolved any disputes. The first stage involved the independent screening of titles and abstracts. A consensus meeting was held afterwards, and the project supervisor resolved disagreements that could not be reconciled after discussion. The second stage involved the screening of full texts of studies that were included in the first stage. The screening was done in the same format as described in the former.

Data charting

Following the screening, a comprehensive and rigorous analysis of the eligible research papers was conducted, and general study characteristics, such as author names, publication dates, study design, study population and geographic location of the studies, were extracted. All the relevant data were organised systematically in a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. The key variables such as the reported barriers explored in the articles were carefully analysed, and the overarching domains identified from the papers were patient-related, health care professional-related and health care system-related. A subset of these outcomes discussed in the eligible papers was selected to ensure relevance and brevity.

Critical appraisal of individual sources of evidence

To assess the quality of the studies, the mixed methods appraisal tool (MMAT) version 2018 created by Hong et al [17] was utilised. This was done independently by two researchers. A consensus meeting was held afterwards and disagreements that could not be reconciled after discussion were resolved by the project supervisor. The MMAT was developed and validated for the standardisation of the quality assessment for systematic mixed studies review such as this scoping review. The tool has a subset of five questions for each study design which are rated as ‘Yes’, ‘No’ or ‘Can’t tell’. The responses were coded as 0 (No and Can’t tell) or 1 (Yes). Then, according to the reporting suggestions for the MMAT v.2018 tool, a star rating was devised to report the percentage of the quality criteria achieved by a retained study. This was done because calculating an overall score for each study is not informative. Five stars meant that 100% of the quality criteria were met, four stars meant 80%, three meant 60%, two meant 40% and one meant 20%. For mixed method studies, there are 15 criteria to score instead of five. Thus, it is advised that the overall quality score for a mixed method study is equal to that of the weakest component.

Figure 1. Flow diagram (adapted from [18]).

Synthesis of results

The systematic database search and screening process results were summarised in the flow diagram [18]. Tables were used to summarise the general characteristics of included studies and the essential findings and quality ratings of each study separately. A narrative synthesis was used to analyse the results. The barriers were categorised in domains based on the 1994 Agency for Healthcare and Policy Research classification for barriers to optimum pain relief [19]. Additional features that were not included in these tables were described in a narrative format.


Results

Selection and characteristics of sources of evidence

Overall, 14 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in this review as shown in the flow diagram (Figure 1). The geographical distribution of the included studies is illustrated in Figure 2.

Most of the included papers were cross-sectional studies (10/14) and conducted in multiple settings. They utilised methods like questionnaires, in-depth interviews, key informant interviews, surveys and document reviews. The main characteristics of the included studies are illustrated in Table 1. Cancer patients were the commonest population studied although, some studies were conducted on other stakeholders of health such as health service providers and governmental representatives. Furthermore, two were multi-country studies [20, 21] while the remaining 12 were conducted in individual countries within sub-Saharan Africa [22, 23] as depicted in Table 1.

Critical appraisal of sources of evidence

Overall, more than half of the included studies (n = 8) satisfied 100% of the methodological quality criteria set in the quality assessment as highlighted in Table 2.

Figure 2. Sub-Saharan African countries with reported barriers to cancer pain management.

Table 1. General study characteristics.

Table 2. Summary of findings.

Synthesis of results of individual sources of evidence

All the studies investigated barriers to optimal cancer pain management. Although, different factors were classified across the three domains of pain management barriers, at least two domains were significantly represented in more than half of the eligible papers. Healthcare system related barriers were the most frequently reported barriers in the included studies as denoted in Table 2.


Discussion

Summary of evidence

There is a fair geographical distribution of the included studies with 19 out of 46 sub-Saharan African countries represented in at least one study. Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya and South Africa had the highest representation in this review. This is thought to be because evidence suggests that South Africa is one of the three countries reported to have the highest burden of cancer incidence and deaths [2]. It is also the most research advanced country in the sub-region with more scientific publications and experience with grant application for research alongside, Ethiopia, Uganda and Kenya which also feature in the top ten countries with the highest number of studies and peer-reviewed articles in reputable journals [34]. On the other hand, the lack of findings from the other countries not represented in this review is possibly due to limited funding and low political will for research, ongoing conflicts such as in Somalia and Central Africa Republic, and the restrictive language criterion that excludes publications from Francophone countries in the sub-region [34].

Findings from this review may further suggest that the current literature about cancer pain management in sub-Saharan Africa is focused on identifying the problems, describing issues and stating opinions rather than conducting rigorous analytical research.

The reported barriers analysed in this review were categorised into three domains to enable further discussion and conceptualisation of the linkages between the key findings.

Patient-related barriers

Cultural beliefs and practices and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure were the commonest barriers reported by cancer patients. In many African settings, culture influences the interpretation and understanding of pain [35]. For instance, a South African study revealed that cancer patients often believe that the process of dying is expected to be inevitably painful and should be endured while a Ghanian study highlighted that patients believed cancer pain should be tolerated [24, 33]. Also, patient’s cultural perspectives have been shown to influence the use of traditional medicines or non-pharmacological therapies like spiritual beliefs [36]. Interestingly, traditional medicines were reported to further deteriorate patients’ clinical condition and worsened their pain whereas, spiritual beliefs were found to have a positive impact on cancer pain reduction [22, 37]. Findings from this study are similar to results from a systematic review which highlights the normalisation of cancer pain among patients with African descent due to their shared cultural beliefs [36].

Regarding OOP expenditure, the healthcare system in many sub-Saharan African countries lack financial resources for universal health coverage [24]. Hence, only those who can afford to pay for the cost for healthcare services could have access to pain medications [30]. This finding is also corroborated by another review where cost was highlighted as the major contributory factor to delays in cancer care pathway in sub-Saharan Africa [38].

Health professional-related barriers

Health professionals face many challenges to optimal cancer pain management in sub-Saharan Africa. Opiophobia also known as ‘fear of opioids’ was frequently discussed across the studies included in this review. Physicians fear that opioids may interfere with pain assessment, patients may develop tolerance and cancer pain interventions will conceal the advance in cancer treatment [28]. Likewise, health workers’ fears of possible addiction, overdosing and serious side effects related to opioid administration to patients often result in the undertreatment of cancer pain [24, 27]. It is also important to emphasise the interconnection between the barriers faced by health professionals. The limited knowledge and negative attitudes to cancer pain management among health professionals in some countries within the region has been attributed to the fact that health workers had received no formal training on pain management [21, 27, 28]. Thus, even when medications are available, inadequacies in pain assessments and opioid prescription were common among service providers [31]. Similar findings in literature agree that inadequate training on opioid use for pain management is a major obstacle to opioid availability and is the root cause of lack of knowledge, inadequate pain assessments, opiophobia and under-prescribing among health professionals [14, 39].

Healthcare system-related barriers

Judicial barriers such as over-regulation and legal restrictions of controlled medicines (e.g., opioids) are common in sub-Saharan African countries [20, 25, 28]. According to the 2022 report by the International Narcotic Control Board, 85.7% of global consumption of morphine for pain management is within a few high-income countries in North America and Europe, while 14.3% are used by low- and middle-income countries, including sub-Saharan African countries [40]. The non-clinical use of opioids has become a rapidly growing burden in sub-Saharan Africa due to the increasing utilisation of African trade routes for illegal opioid trafficking to Europe [41]. Thus, sub-Saharan Africa faces the double burden of devising strategies to curb the epidemic while improving access to opioids for pain relief in clinical settings.

Also, evidence suggest that pain management in cancer patients is hindered by logistical and procurement challenges surrounding morphine availability [21]. A significant challenge is the practice of projecting opioid need based on previous year's consumption [21]. A situation which might result in the underestimation of need if consumption levels were low in the previous year because of other barriers, such as high cost. Such underestimation may lead to opioid stockouts making it more difficult for cancer patients to access necessary opioids [20].

Furthermore, inadequate resource allocation, such as funding, significantly contributes to poor health service delivery in sub-Saharan Africa [42, 43]. Since direct OOP payment is the region's most used healthcare financing method, cancer patients are often saddled with the responsibility of paying for the prohibitive cost of opioid analgesics and other complementary drugs for opioid-related side effects, such as laxatives [25]. One study reported that OOP costs of medical care were the highest in the cancer patient group – with a mean cost of $207 compared with $55.4 for the general study population [29]. Other factors such as workforce shortages and urban-rural disparities in resource distribution within the health system could also limit the availability and accessibility to cancer pain management [21, 24, 25].

Concept modelling

Following the analysis of existing evidence, several connections between the existing barriers were reported by the studies included in this review and depicted in Figure 3. Applying system-level thinking could help policymakers and future researchers focus on gaps in knowledge and evidence and, thus, implement strategies or conduct further analyses to address these barriers [44].

Figure 3. Concept map.

Perspectives

The literature analyses uncovered that studies on cancer pain are closely linked to palliative care. Therefore, further research on the availability and quality of palliative care services in sub-Saharan Africa could enhance or differentiate the outcomes of this review.

Limitations

The studies included in this review were conducted in specific locations, meaning their results may not be generalisable to other countries not represented in the data. Similarly, selection bias might have occurred at recruitment given that many of the papers were cross-sectional studies without randomisation.

Also, excluding publications from Francophone and Arabic countries due to the pre-specified language eligibility criterion could have limited the inclusion of potentially relevant studies from these countries. Only a database search was conducted; hence, grey literature and publications that could have been identified through other search methods such as, snowballing and citation searching, might have been omitted.


Conclusion

The barriers to effectively managing cancer pain in sub-Saharan Africa cuts across several levels of the healthcare system, and evidence indicates connections between and within the significant domains identified in the literature. Health system-level barriers were found to be a significant contributor to inadequate cancer pain treatment. Some of the key findings of this review align with other systematic studies conducted within sub-Saharan Africa and on individuals of African descent elsewhere. Further high-quality research on system-level interventions to inadequate cancer pain management and related concepts, such as palliative care, is needed.


Acknowledgment

VOM would like to extend her sincere gratitude to Nigeria LNG Limited for awarding her the esteemed Overseas Postgraduate Scholarship. This scholarship enabled her to pursue a full-time MSc programme at the prestigious University of Aberdeen.


Conflicts of interest

None declared.


Funding

No funding was sought for this scoping review.


Author contributions

VOM conceptualised the research topic under the supervisory guidance of PF, VOM and OAS independently conducted the screening of articles at both stages and quality assessment of the selected papers for the review. All disputes arising from both processes were resolved by PF. VOM wrote the various sections of the paper in fulfilment of her MSc programme. OAS, RK and PF critically reviewed the draft and made significant corrections, where appropriate. All authors gave the approval for the final draft to be published.


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Appendix 1: Search strategy

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