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Geriatric assessment integration is key for equitable cancer care in aging Morocco

Geriatric assessment integration is key for equitable cancer care in aging Morocco
Photo by National Cancer Institute / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider integrating geriatric assessment early to address vulnerability and improve cancer care equity in older Moroccan adults.

This narrative review addresses the state of cancer care for older adults in Morocco, a country where adults aged 60 years and older represent 13.8% of the population in 2024 (approximately 8% aged 65+). The review synthesizes available data on cancer epidemiology, geriatric vulnerability, and healthcare system capacity. Age-standardized cancer incidence rates are reported at 120 to 137 per 100,000, and a substantial proportion of patients present with metastatic disease at diagnosis. Vulnerability, as measured by abnormal G8 screening, exceeds 80% in some series. The review highlights that the geriatric workforce is limited and oncology services are strongly concentrated in urban areas. Structured geriatric assessment has not yet been consistently implemented in routine oncology care. The authors do not report a systematic search methodology, and the review is narrative in nature, so conclusions are qualitative. Limitations include the lack of consistent geriatric assessment implementation. The authors emphasize that early integration of geriatric assessment, registry adaptation, and multidisciplinary coordination will be essential to ensure equitable, age-adapted cancer care in an aging society.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BackgroundMorocco is experiencing rapid demographic aging alongside a rising cancer burden, creating structural challenges for the care of older adults with cancer. This review synthesizes current evidence on geriatric oncology in Morocco and proposes a conceptual framework to guide system-level adaptation.MethodsWe conducted a structured narrative review of peer-reviewed publications, population-based registry data, national demographic reports, and policy documents published between 2000 and 2025 (last search: January 2026). Evidence was synthesized qualitatively and organized into six predefined analytical domains: (1) demographic transition, (2) cancer epidemiology, (3) health system organization, (4) access to care, (5) workforce capacity, and (6) geriatric assessment and clinical practice. These domains are applied consistently as the organizing framework across the Results sections and are explicitly mapped onto the WHO Health System Building Blocks and the Four-Phase Oncogeriatric Transition framework in the Discussion.ResultsIn 2024, adults aged ≥60 years accounted for 13.8% of Morocco's population, while individuals aged ≥65 years represented approximately 8%, with projections indicating a marked increase by 2050. Population-based registries report age-standardized cancer incidence rates around 120–137 per 100,000. Available cohorts indicate high vulnerability prevalence (e.g., >80% abnormal G8 in some series), substantial metastatic presentation at diagnosis, limited geriatric workforce capacity, and a strong urban concentration of oncology services. Structured geriatric assessment is not yet consistently implemented in routine oncology care.ConclusionThese findings suggest that Morocco is entering an oncogeriatric transition characterized by a growing mismatch between demographic acceleration and geriatric-integrated oncology capacity. We propose a Four-Phase Oncogeriatric Transition framework to conceptualize this evolution and inform policy, workforce planning, and phased implementation strategies. Early integration of geriatric assessment, registry adaptation, and multidisciplinary coordination will be essential to ensure equitable, age-adapted cancer care in an aging society.
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