1. Patterns and cost of care according to keratinocyte cancer risk stratification in a volunteer population screening clinic: Real‐world data from the TRoPICS study.
- Author
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Lee, Ruby Chia‐Lin, Liyanage, Upekha, Fry, Kirsty, Brown, Susan, von Schuckmann, Lena, Spelman, Lynda, Soyer, H. Peter, Neale, Rachel E., Gordon, Louisa G., Whiteman, David C., Olsen, Catherine M., Janda, Monika, and Khosrotehrani, Kiarash
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,CANCER chemoprevention ,DISEASE risk factors ,KERATINOCYTES ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,DERMATOLOGISTS ,MEDICAL screening - Abstract
Background: Risk prediction tools have been developed for keratinocyte cancers (KCs) to effectively categorize individuals with different levels of skin cancer burden. Few have been clinically validated nor routinely used in clinical settings. Objectives: To assess whether risk prediction tool categories associate with interventions including chemoprophylaxis for skin cancer, and health‐care costs in a dermatologist‐run screening clinic. Methods: Adult participants who presented to a walk‐in screening facility were invited to participate. A self‐completed KC risk prediction tool was used to classify participants into one of the five risk categories. Participants subsequently underwent full skin examination by a dermatologist. Dermatological interventions and skin cancer‐related medical prescriptions were documented. Total health‐care costs, both to the health‐care system and patients were evaluated. Results: Of the 507 participants recruited, 5‐fluorouracil cream and nicotinamide were more frequently prescribed in the higher risk groups as chemoprophylaxis (p < 0.005). A significant association with high predicted risk was also observed in the use of cryotherapy and curettage and cautery (p < 0.05). The average health‐care costs associated with a skin check visit increased from $90 ± 37 (standard deviation) in the lowest risk group to $149 ± 97 in the highest risk group (p < 0.0001). Conclusions: We observed a positive association between higher predicted risk of skin cancer and the prescription of chemoprophylaxis and health‐care costs involved with opportunistic community skin cancer screening. A clinical use of risk stratification may be to provide an opportunity for clinicians to discuss skin cancer prevention and chemoprophylaxis with individual patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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