Publications by authors named "Saleh Al-Othman"

Article Synopsis
  • Cancer is becoming a significant health issue, particularly in under-resourced countries like those in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), where its prevalence is expected to rise, impacting the economy.
  • Policymakers in GCC nations are focusing on creating National Cancer Control Strategies to tackle cancer through initiatives aimed at prevention, early detection, and management, including enhancing health-care capacities and building partnerships.
  • This review aims to assess the current cancer control programs in GCC countries, evaluate accomplishments so far, identify existing gaps, and provide recommendations to reduce cancer's impact in the region moving forward.
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Background: Liver cancer has been identified as the fifth most common cancer in males and ninth in females in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) States. Taking into consideration that GCC states have comparable cultural and demographic backgrounds, this study aimed to examine the trends and patterns of liver cancer cases in the GCC states and to compare these with other regions.

Materials And Methods: The data were obtained from the Gulf Centre for Cancer Control and Prevention, which has maintained its database for GCC states since 1998.

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Cancer is a major health problem in both high income and middle-to-low income countries, and is the second leading cause of death in the world. Although more than a third of cancer could be prevented and another third could be cured if diagnosed early, it remains a huge challenge to health-care systems worldwide. Despite substantial improvements in health services some of the countries in the Gulf region, the burden of non-communicable diseases is a major threat, primarily due to the rapid socioeconomic shifts that have led to unfavourable changes in lifestyle such as increased tobacco use, decreased physical activity, and consumption of unhealthy food.

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Background: Accurate diagnosis of the primary cause of an individual's kidney disease can be essential for proper management. Some kidney diseases have overlapping histopathologic features despite being caused by defects in different genes. In this report, we describe 2 consanguineous Saudi Arabian families in which individuals presented with kidney failure and mixed clinical and histologic features initially believed to be consistent with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis.

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