By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
DNE Africa
  • Home
  • Politics
    cassava roots jpg 1 996x567 1
    Science

    Climate Change Expands Cassava Farming in Africa—but Also Spreads Deadly Crop Disease

    By Mohammed El-Said 6 Min Read
    blood science vega
    HealthScience

    Simple Blood Test Could Transform Cancer Diagnosis for Children in Africa

    By Mohammed El-Said March 19, 2026
    Amhara Fano National Movement captures 520 troops in large-scale offensive in Ethiopa
    Politics

    Amhara Fano National Movement captures 520 troops in large-scale  offensive

    By Ashebir Getahun March 18, 2026
  • Business
    climate shocks vulnerability
    BusinessScience

    Climate Change Could Deepen Food Crisis in East Africa by 2050

    A new scientific review warns that climate change combined with rapid population…

    By Mohammed El-Said 4 Min Read
    omega 1 130922 cakuo
    BusinessScienceTechnology
    Heat and Dust Are Cutting Solar Power Output Across Sub-Saharan Africa, Study Finds
    Double-Edged Sword- Backbase Reveals How AI is Redefining Trust in African Banking
    Business
    Beyond the Chatbot: Backbase Report Charts Africa’s AI-Driven Financial Revolution
    South Africa Faces Export Pressure as U.S. Considers New Tariff Regime
    Business
    South Africa Faces Export Pressure as U.S. Considers New Tariff Regime
    African Energy Week AEW 2025 opens in Cape Town
    Business
    African Energy Week 2025 opens in Cape Town
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Reading: Simple Blood Test Could Transform Cancer Diagnosis for Children in Africa
Sign In
  • Join US
DNE AfricaDNE Africa
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • World
  • My Bookmarks
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
blood science vega

Simple Blood Test Could Transform Cancer Diagnosis for Children in Africa

Mohammed El-Said
Last updated: March 19, 2026 6:39 pm
By Mohammed El-Said 5 Min Read
Share
SHARE

A new study has found that a simple blood test could help doctors diagnose a fast-growing cancer much more quickly in parts of Africa, where delays in testing often cost lives.

The research, published in Nature Medicine, was led by scientists from University of Oxford and Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in Tanzania.

The test uses a method known as a “liquid biopsy,” which allows doctors to detect cancer using a small blood sample instead of taking tissue from the body.

The study focused on Burkitt lymphoma, a fast-growing cancer that mainly affects children in sub-Saharan Africa. Although the disease is aggressive, it can often be cured if treated early, with survival rates above 90%.

However, many patients in the region are diagnosed too late.

Traditional diagnostic methods require trained specialists and laboratory equipment that are often not available in low-resource settings. As a result, many children either go undiagnosed or receive treatment too late, and survival rates in some areas can fall below 50%.

“There is an urgent need for new diagnostic methods that are practical and effective in the under-resourced settings where Burkitt lymphoma is most common,” said Professor Anna Schuh, a molecular diagnostics expert at Oxford and lead author of the study.

“This is a highly treatable cancer, yet too many children and young adults are not diagnosed in time,” she added. “Liquid biopsy tests have enormous potential to transform diagnosis in sub-Saharan Africa and significantly improve outcomes.”

Liquid biopsies work by detecting tiny fragments of DNA that cancer cells release into the bloodstream. By analyzing this DNA, doctors can identify the specific genetic changes linked to Burkitt lymphoma and distinguish it from other diseases.

In this study, researchers from Oxford worked closely with teams in Tanzania and Uganda, including hospitals and national laboratories, to develop and test the new approach.

The team evaluated the blood test in children and young adults who showed signs of lymphoma across four hospitals in the two countries. They compared the results with those from standard tissue-based tests.

The results were promising.

The liquid biopsy test showed an overall accuracy of 98% in distinguishing Burkitt lymphoma from other conditions. Among patients who were confirmed to have the disease through traditional testing, the blood test correctly identified more than 86%.

Just as importantly, the test was much faster.

On average, the liquid biopsy provided a diagnosis more than 40 days earlier than traditional tissue biopsy methods. This speed can make a critical difference for patients with Burkitt lymphoma, which can progress rapidly if not treated.

Clara Chamba, head of haematology at MUHAS and one of the study authors, said the test had an immediate impact in clinical settings.

“Introducing liquid biopsy into our multidisciplinary meetings transformed how quickly we could start treating our patients,” she said.

“With liquid biopsy, 93% of cases were diagnosed within the first week of sample collection, compared to just 40% when we relied on tissue biopsy alone. For a cancer that progresses as quickly as Burkitt lymphoma, that time can be life-saving.”

The researchers say that while more work is needed before the test can be widely used, the findings show strong potential for improving cancer care in low-resource settings.

The test could be especially useful in areas where access to traditional biopsy services is limited or delayed.

By shortening diagnosis times and improving accuracy, the approach could help ensure that more patients begin treatment early—when the chances of survival are highest.

Professor Bruno Sunguya, deputy vice chancellor for research and consultancy at MUHAS, said the study also highlights the growing role of African institutions in leading advanced medical research.

“The successful implementation and analytical work conducted in Tanzania and Uganda demonstrates that precision medicine research can and should be led from within low- and middle-income countries,” he said.

He added that the technology could be applied to other types of cancer in the future.

“Beyond lymphoma, this work opens new opportunities to apply genomic and liquid biopsy technologies to strengthen cancer diagnosis and improve outcomes more broadly across the region,” Sunguya said.

As researchers continue to refine the test, the study offers hope that a simple blood sample could soon help save thousands of lives by making cancer diagnosis faster, easier, and more accessible across Africa.

You Might Also Like

Climate Change Expands Cassava Farming in Africa—but Also Spreads Deadly Crop Disease

Amhara Fano National Movement captures 520 troops in large-scale  offensive

New African Mushroom Discovery May Solve Mystery of ‘Magic Mushroom’ Origins

 Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia brace as Gulf patrons look inward

Pandemic Financial Worries Slowed Digital Finance Adoption in Africa

TAGGED:AfricabloodDNAHealth
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Reddit Telegram Email Copy Link

You Might Also Like

Sudan warns Ethiopia against hostile drone incursions into its territory
Politics

Sudan warns Ethiopia against “hostile” drone incursions into its territory

By DNE Africa 2 Min Read
Jawar Mohammed Exposes Ethiopian Airlines Alleged Transport of Sudan's RSF Forces to Assosa
Politics

Jawar Mohammed Exposes Ethiopian Airlines Alleged Transport of Sudan’s RSF Forces to Assosa

By DNE Africa 3 Min Read
Low Res DSCN7937
Science

Rethinking the Green Revolution: What Tanzanian Farmers Are Teaching Development Planners

By Mohammed El-Said 6 Min Read

More Popular from DNE AFRICA

Ad imageAd image
Politics

Ethiopia Secretly Training RSF Fighters for Sudan War: REUTERS

Ethiopia has established a clandestine military camp to train thousands of Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries,…

By DNE Africa
opinionPolitics

South Sudan’s White Army explained: What it is – and what it isn’t

Jan Pospisil – The UN issued warnings of potential mass violence between the South Sudanese government…

By The Conversation
opinionPolitics

Libya’s Stolen Future: Saif al-Islam Gaddafi and The Betrayal of Africa

History will not be kind to those who cheered the destruction of Libya. It will not…

By Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad
HealthScience

Drought and Floods in Africa Are Shaping Climate Action Behaviour, Review Finds

Extreme weather events such as droughts, floods and heatwaves are increasingly influencing how African communities respond…

By Mohammed El-Said
DNE Africa

News by Africans, For Africans

Categories

  • The Escapist
  • Entertainment
  • Business

Quick Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Newsletters
  • Complaint
  • Deal

DNE Africa.All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?