Problem considered: From maps to medicine, geospatial epidemiology offers a powerful lens to visualize cancer distribution and translate spatial insights into actionable healthcare planning.Gastrointestinal (GI) and Hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) Cancers pose a significant burden in India, yet fine-scale spatial mapping remains underutilized for cancer control planning.Methods:This was a retrospective record-based study of 1,544 patients with Gastrointestinal /Hepatopancreatobiliary Cancers treated at a tertiary cancer centre in Rohilkhand region, Uttar Pradesh (January, 2013-August, 2025).Demographic, tumor site, and clinical outcome data were analyzed.Residential addresses were geo-coded to block level, and Spatial clustering of hospital-treated cases were identified using Local Moran's I statistics. Results:The median age of patients was 53 years (IQR 44-62), with nearly equal sex distribution.HPB cancers accounted for 56% of cases, of which Gallbladder carcinoma was the most frequent (43%) with female predominance (69.7%).Patients predominantly came from district Bareilly 703(46%), Shahjahanpur 214(14%), and Pilibhit 198 (13%).Among 75 blocks analyzed, 2 (2.6%) showed significant clustering of hospital-treated GI cancer cases.For HPB cancers, 4 (5.3%)blocks in Bareilly and 3 (4%) blocks in Rampur demonstrated significant clustering (p < 0.05).Conclusion: This study concludes spatial heterogeneity in the distribution of hospital-treated GI/HPB cancer cases in the Rohilkhand region, with a predominance of gallbladder carcinoma.Identified clusters represent spatial concentrations of patients presenting to a tertiary care center and should be interpreted as descriptive/hypothesis-generating.These findings may inform future studies and more detailed investigations incorporating population denominators and environmental/healthcare access factors.
Kumar et al. (Wed,) studied this question.