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Article
en
2023

The association of dermatologist demographic density with melanoma survival in New South Wales, Australia

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en
2023
Vol 64 (3)
Vol. 64
DOI: 10.1111/ajd.14113dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajd.14113

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Richard A Scolyer
Richard A Scolyer

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Stephanie Blake
Pascale Guitera
Anne Ε. Cust
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Abstract

Most Australian dermatologists (92%) work in major cities,1 limiting dermatology access to people residing in urban areas and placing a burden on rural patients to travel to major centres for such care. In the United States, higher melanoma mortality has been observed in areas with low dermatologist density.2, 3 Whether a similar association exists in other populations is currently unknown. We aimed to assess the association of dermatologist density with melanoma survival in the state of New South Wales (NSW), Australia. The Melanoma Patterns of Care (MPOC) study is a population-based study of doctors' reported management of adult patients with a histological diagnosis of primary invasive cutaneous melanoma and a much smaller subset with in situ melanomas identified in the same period and notified to the NSW Cancer Registry between 23 October 2006 and 22 October 2007. Additional study details have been published previously.4 A follow-up study has been conducted in which the MPOC data set was linked to the NSW Cancer Registry, the NSW Registry for Births, Deaths and Marriages and the Cause of Death Unit Record Files from NSW and the Australian Capital Territory, to collect additional cancer and mortality data up to December 2018, achieving a >10-year follow-up of all cases. Patient characteristics included age, sex and residential postcode. Recorded features of diagnosed melanomas included Breslow thickness, histological subtype, site and type of biopsy performed and clinician characteristics included age and postcode of treating doctor. Remoteness from medical services was assessed using the Australian Standard Geographical Classification Remoteness Area Score (ASGC-RA)5 and assigned to patients and clinicians based on their workplace or residence postcode at time of diagnosis, using 2006 Census data. Socio-economic status was measured using the Index of Relative Socio-Economic Disadvantage (ISRD)6 and postcode. Dermatologist density was assessed using the Australian Health Practitioners Registration Association (AHPRA) National Health Workforce Dataset from 2013.7 As the APHRA dataset did not provide density data when there were less than three dermatologists in a region, we also used an opt-in database of workplace postcodes managed by the Australasian College of Dermatologists to estimate dermatologist density. The density (per 100,000 population) was mapped to regions from the Australian Statistical Geography standard, Statistical Area Level 4 (ASGC-SAL4) from 2011, and categorised.5 Patients who had multiple primary melanomas had their thickest melanoma included, and those with in situ melanoma or with metastatic melanoma when diagnosed were excluded. The association between melanoma survival and dermatologist density was assessed in a multivariable analysis, adjusting for age, sex, patient's ASGC-RA and IRSD, histological subtype and Breslow thickness. Analysis was conducted using SAS (version 9.3, SAS Institute Inc.), with statistical significance inferred at p < 0.05. The analysis data set comprised 3160 patients (82% of the original MPOC study participants). Patient and tumour characteristics are summarised in Table 1, and their clinician characteristics are in Table 2. Of the participants, 7% died from melanoma and a further 27% died from other causes. 25% of melanomas were diagnosed by dermatologists, 36% by generalist general practitioners (GPs) and 16% by skin-cancer specialised GPs (Table 2). Median follow-up was 11.5 years. No differences in melanoma-specific survival were observed between metropolitan, regional and remote populations. No significant association with melanoma-specific survival was seen with increasing dermatologist demographic density (Table 3). In a US study, Aneja et al.2 found that the presence of 0.001 to 1 dermatologist/100,000 population was associated with a 35% reduction in melanoma-specific mortality (95% CI 13%–57%) compared with no dermatologists. Another study found that an increase in dermatologists increased the odds of earlier diagnosis: OR 1.4 for early-stage (in situ, locally confined) vs late-stage (regional or distant metastasis) diagnosis per additional dermatologist/10,000 population, (95% CI 1.1–1.7, p = 0.01).3 In our study, while GPs performed the majority of initial excisions for melanoma, only 27% of GPs who did the excision biopsy also did the definitive wide local excision.9 Limitations of the study include that we may not have captured all dermatologists working in NSW, but believe we had good coverage, as the database used is managed by the only accredited college for the training and continuing professional development of dermatologists in Australia. Secondly, advances have been made in melanoma care since the study period, with increasing use of immunotherapies improving outcomes for patients with later-stage disease. There is considerable variation in Australian GPs' confidence and engagement in managing melanoma,10 GP-led melanoma care in Australia has been reported to be aligned with current guidelines and yields similar survival rates to the national average.8 Whereas in the US family physicians do not routinely perform skin exams or biopsies,11 Australian GPs and dermatologists are each well placed to offer skin checks, which are associated with diagnosis of thinner melanomas and lower mortality.12 These reasons, and the universal health care available in Australia, may help explain the lack of association we observed between dermatologist demographic density and melanoma survival. We acknowledge the investigators from the Melanoma Patterns of Care Study. We thank the Centre for Health Record Linkage, NSW Ministry of Health, Cancer Institute NSW and NSW Cancer Registry for providing linked data. The Cause of Death Unit Record File (COD URF) is provided by the Australian Coordinating Registry for the COD URF on behalf of the NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages, NSW Coroner and the National Coronial Information System. The COD URF is held by the NSW Ministry of Health Secure Analytics for Population Health Research and Intelligence. The authors are very grateful to the Melanoma Institute Australia, the Cancer Institute NSW, The University of Sydney and the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital for their assistance and in-kind support, and Associate Professor Austin Curtin (an investigator on the original study), Cathelijne van Kemenade (who assisted with collection of follow-up data) and the many NSW physicians who took part in the study. The Cameron Family's support of the Melanoma Institute Australia Research Database is also gratefully acknowledged. We thank Chris Goumas for his work regarding the initial statistical analysis plan for this project. This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Centre of Research Excellence in Melanoma Grant #1135285 and Project Grant #1165936; Cancer Institute NSW (05/POC/1-06), and the NSW State Government via a grant to the NSW Melanoma Network. Additional financial and in-kind support was provided by Melanoma Institute Australia and the NSW Melanoma Network. RAS is supported by a NHMRC Investigator Grant (#2018514). RLM is supported by an NHMRC Investigator Grant (#1194703) and a University of Sydney Robinson Fellowship. RAS, GJM and JFT were recipients of an NHMRC Program Grant (1093017). AEC is supported by a NHMRC Investigator Grant (#2008454). RAS has received fees for professional services from MetaOptima Technology Inc., F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, Evaxion, Provectus Biopharmaceuticals Australia, Qbiotics, Novartis, Merck Sharp & Dohme, NeraCare, AMGEN Inc., Bristol-Myers Squibb, Myriad Genetics and GlaxoSmithKline. JFT has received honoraria for advisory board participation from BMS Australia, MSD Australia, GSK and Provectus Inc and travel and conference support from GSK, Provectus Inc and Novartis. Other authors have nothing to declare. The Human Research Ethics Committees of the University of Sydney and Cancer Institute NSW approved this project.

How to cite this publication

Stephanie Blake, Pascale Guitera, Anne Ε. Cust, Claire Galea, Serigne Lo, Richard A Scolyer, Bruce K. Armstrong, John F. Thompson, Scott W. Menzies, Christine Madronio, Rachael L. Morton, Graham J. Mann, Caroline G. Watts (2023). The association of dermatologist demographic density with melanoma survival in New South Wales, Australia. , 64(3), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ajd.14113.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2023

Authors

13

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1111/ajd.14113

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