DENVER – As many as 25% of Medicare patients with melanoma will experience treatment delays of up to 1.5 months, and 18% may have treatment delays as long as 3 months after a lesion is biopsied, especially if a nondermatologist is performing the excision, based on data from a review of more than 32,000 patients.
Patients who saw dermatologists for their surgery were much less likely to experience a delay in treatment, Dr. Jason Lott said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology.
"If a primary care provider was doing the surgery – and many still do their own surgery – patients were 1.6 times more likely to have a delay of more than 1.5 months, and twice as likely to have a delay of more than 3 months," said Dr. Lott of Yale University, New Haven, Conn. "I am making the argument that specialty matters."
Other factors significantly associated with treatment delay included older patient age, comorbidities, tumor stage, and lesion location.
To examine factors contributing to a surgical delay in the United States, Dr. Lott and his colleagues conducted a population-based study of treatment waiting times in more than 32,501 Medicare patients who had been diagnosed with melanoma from 2000 to 2009. The primary outcome was the time between biopsy and surgical treatment.
The most common lesion sites were the head and neck (40%), followed by the extremities and trunk. Compared with head/neck lesions, surgery on the trunk and extremities was significantly less likely to be delayed up to 1.5 months (odds ratio, 0.74).
Melanomas were about equally divided between in situ and localized disease (48% and 44%), with the remainder having distant occurrence. Compared with in situ disease, regional and distant disease were significantly more likely to be treated later, with odds ratios ranging from 1.31 for a delay of up to 1.5 months (regional disease) to 2.15 for a delay of more than 3 months (distant disease).
Older patients had greater delays than did younger patients, with the biggest disparities between those aged 80-84 years and those aged 70-74 years, In the younger group, 54% were treated within 1 month, compared with 50% of the older patients. A delay of up to 3 months occurred in 38% of the younger group and 41% of the older group.
Patients with no medical comorbidities received significantly prompter treatment, with 54% being treated within 1 month compared with 47% of those with three comorbidities.
Expeditious treatment is certainly important to patients, Dr. Lott said, and likely important for achieving optimal outcomes. "Patients don’t like walking around knowing they have a malignancy that’s not treated, with even a marginally increased chance that something bad will happen," he noted.
That risk is not unfounded, Dr. Lott said. The United Kingdom’s "2-week" rule, implemented in 2000, mandates an urgent consultation for suspected malignancies. Patients with suspected melanomas are seen in a special pigmented lesions clinic, and often treated on the same day. In 2007, this practice was shown to positively impact melanoma survival.
Dr. Lott described a retrospective study conducted in the United Kingdom that examined outcomes in 4,399 patients, all of whom were evaluated at a pigmented lesions clinic within 2 weeks of a primary care identification of a suspicious lesion. During the study period, 96 melanomas were identified, and 96% of those were treated within 2 weeks of the primary referral. Most (74%) were excised on the day of the clinic visit.
The authors compared these results with those of 78 melanoma patients who were diagnosed in the 2 years before urgent referral became standard. These patients waited up to 34 days for a referral and up to 74 days for treatment. Patients seen in the clinic had significantly thinner tumors (Breslow thickness 1.68 vs. 2.39 mm). In addition to melanomas, 748 nonmelanoma skin cancers were treated at the clinics.
Among the melanoma patients diagnosed in the clinics, the 5-year survival rate was 82%, compared with 62% in patients diagnosed before the urgent referral.
"Earlier treatment does matter," Dr. Lott said.
Dr. Lott said he had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
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