Ghana startup strives for greater African representation in cancer
research
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[May 25, 2022] By
Cooper Inveen and Francis Kokoroko
ACCRA (Reuters) - In the open-air kitchen
of a small research clinic in Ghana's capital, Accra, pathologist Kafui
Akakpo carefully carved a piece of cancerous breast tissue into a sample
smaller than a matchbox.
Hundreds of other samples bobbed around him in plastic jars of
formaldehyde, but this one would soon travel across town to Yemaachi
Biotech, a Ghanaian research and diagnostics startup that Akakpo thinks
could change African cancer studies forever.
"Even though breast cancer has been studied extensively throughout the
world, the truth is that most samples are not of Africans," he said.
Data on cancer in Africa is scarce. While more than 17% of the world's
population, only 2% of genomic study participants worldwide are of
African descent, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human
Services.
Yet cancer is a growing problem on the continent, with a recent
University of Tunis study projecting African mortalities to exceed the
global average by 30% in the next 20 years.
"The majority of medical research (in Africa) is focused on infectious
diseases, and yet we have some of the highest cancer mortality rates of
anywhere in the world," said Yaw Bediako, CEO and co-founder of Yemaachi,
which launched in 2020.
As one of Ghana's only labs equipped for molecular analysis, Bediako's
team have tasked themselves with collecting data they believe will
advance the development of medicine for cancer patients throughout the
continent and diaspora.
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Dr. Kafui Akakpo, a pathologist, observes a breast lump with a
tumour at the Pathologists Without Borders laboratory in Accra,
Ghana May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Francis Kokoroko
Eventually, the startup aims to construct a
first-of-its-kind genomic archive of cancers in Black people from
around the world.
Akakpo is currently working on a study of the various kinds of
breast cancer affecting Black women, whom studies show are
disproportionately affected by the disease. Another will aim to
sequence every type of childhood cancer in Ghana.
Yemaachi also recently launched Ghana's first home testing kit for
human papillomavirus (HPV), one of the leading causes of cervical
cancer. The American Cancer Society estimates more than a third of
global cervical cancer deaths occur in Africa.
In just over a year, Yemaachi has raised around $3 million in seed
funding, mostly from African investors, plus another $1 million from
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to investigate how Africans
respond to COVID-19 vaccines.
"The treatment of cancer is not always going to be in the clinic.
Most treatments began on a lab table, so if we want to find a cure
in Africa for Africans, then we have to start it here," said
Emmanuella Amoako, Yemaachi's clinical affairs lead.
(Reporting by Cooper Inveen and Francis Kokoroko; Editing by Nellie
Peyton and Lisa Shumaker)
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