'The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners'
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) is the most common cancer in Australia and thus the most costly to treat. Despite the
high prevalence of NMSC, little is known about the rate of malignancy in excised or biopsied nonpigmented lesions.
METHOD
An audit of 912 reports relating to nonpigmented skin samples from 749 patients processed during January 2005 in Tasmania.
RESULTS
Nonmelanoma skin cancer was present in 60.6% of samples from specialists and 44.5% from nonspecialists/primary care
doctors (p<0.001); 1.6 skin lesions were excised or biopsied in order to identify one malignant or pre-invasive lesion (1.3
for specialists and 1.7 for nonspecialists). The number of NMSCs increased with age and were more common in men.
DISCUSSION
Medical practitioners are efficient in their management of nonpigmented skin lesions in both primary and secondary care