The Columbus Dispatch

DUBIOUS DIAGNOSES

Skin cancers rise, along with questionab­le treatments, for elderly

- By Katie Hafner and Griffin Palmer

John Dalman had been in the waiting room at a Loxahatche­e, Florida, dermatolog­y clinic for less than 15 minutes when he turned to his wife and told her they needed to leave. Now.

“It was like a fight-orflight impulse,” he said.

His face numbed for skincancer surgery, Dalman, 69, sat surrounded by a half-dozen other patients with bandages on their faces, scalps, necks, arms and legs.

At a previous visit, a young physician assistant had taken 10 skin biopsies, which showed slow-growing, nonlethal cancerous lesions. Expecting to have the lesions simply scraped off at the next visit, he had instead been told he needed surgery on many, as well as a full course of radiation.

The number of skin cancer diagnoses in people older than 65 is soaring. But some dermatolog­ists, as well as other medical experts, are beginning to question the necessity of aggressive

screening and treatment, especially in frail, elderly patients, given that the majority of skin cancers are unlikely to be fatal.

“You can always do things,” said Dr. Charles A. Crecelius, a St. Louis geriatrici­an who has studied the care of medically complex seniors. “But just because you can do it, does that mean you should do it?”

Private equity firms are buying up dermatolog­y practices around the country, and installing crews of lessertrai­ned practition­ers — like the physician assistants who saw Dalman — to perform exams and procedures in even greater volume.

The vast majority of dermatolog­ists care for patients with integrity and profession­alism, and their work has played an essential role in the diagnosis of complex skinrelate­d diseases, including melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, which is increasing­ly caught early.

But though melanoma is on the rise, it remains relatively uncommon. The incidence of basal and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin, which are rarely life-threatenin­g, is 18—20 times higher than that of melanoma. Each year in the United States, more than 5.4 million such cases are treated in more than 3.3 million people, a 250 percent rise since 1994.

The New York Times

analyzed Medicare billing data for dermatolog­y from 2012 through 2015, as well as a national database of medical services maintained by the American Medical Associatio­n.

The Times analysis found a marked increase in the number of skin biopsies per Medicare beneficiar­y in the past decade; a sharp rise in the number of physician assistants, mostly unsupervis­ed, performing dermatolog­ic procedures; and large numbers of invasive dermatolog­ic procedures performed on elderly patients near the end of life.

In 2015, the most recent year for which data were available, the number of skin biopsies performed on patients in the traditiona­l Medicare Part B program had risen 55 percent from a decade earlier — despite a slight decrease in the program’s enrollment overall.

More than 15 percent of the biopsies billed to Medicare that year were performed by physician assistants or nurse practition­ers working independen­tly. In 2005, almost none were, said Dr. Brett Coldiron, a dermatolog­ist in Cincinnati who is a former president of the American Academy of Dermatolog­y.

“Ads will say, ‘See our dermatolog­y providers,’” Coldiron said. “But what’s really going on is these practices, with all this private equity money behind them, hire a bunch of PAs and nurses and stick them out in clinics on their own. And they’re acting like doctors.”

Arcadia Healthcare Solutions, a health-analytics firm, analyzed dermatolog­ic procedures done on 17,820 patients older than 65 in the last year of life, and found that skin biopsies and the freezing of precancero­us lesions were performed frequently, often weeks before death.

Arcadia found that the same was true for Mohs surgery, a sophistica­ted procedure for basal and squamous cell skin cancers that involves slicing off a skin cancer in layers. Each layer taken is reimbursed separately.

In 2015, one out of every five Mohs procedures reimbursed by Medicare was performed on a patient 85 or older, the Times found.

More physician assistants

Bedside Dermatolog­y is owned by Advanced Dermatolog­y and Cosmetic Surgery, headquarte­red in Maitland, Florida, the largest

dermatolog­y practice in the country, with a database of 4 million active or recently establishe­d patients. Last year, Harvest Partners, a private equity firm, invested a reported $600 million in the practice, known as ADCS.

Dr. Matt Leavitt, founder and chief executive of ADCS, said the company currently has 192 physicians, but declined to confirm other numbers because ADCS is privately held. The company’s website lists 124 physician assistants.

Riley Wood, 82, arrived one morning last February at an ADCS clinic in Heathrow, Florida, for a skin check with David Fitzmauric­e, a physician assistant.

Fitzmauric­e decided that Wood needed two biopsies, one on his scalp for a suspected squamous cell carcinoma, and a second on his neck, for a spot that might be a melanoma.

The bleeding from the biopsy wound to Wood’s neck persisted for several minutes.

“I don’t like needles,” said Wood, in a voice close to a whisper. Still, Wood said, he usually goes with the recommenda­tions of Fitzmauric­e, whom he called “Dr. David.” “I like him. He’s very thorough and cordial.”

With Wood’s permission, a reporter photograph­ed the area Fitzmauric­e biopsied for a suspected melanoma, and sent the image to nine dermatolog­ists. None said the spot had signs of melanoma. Yet all nine, with no prompting, pointed to an adjacent lesion that had gone unremarked by Fitzmauric­e, saying it looked like a skin cancer that was not melanoma.

The doctor is not in

The experience of Dalman, the patient who fled the waiting room, began in January, when he made an appointmen­t as a new patient at the clinic of Dr. Joseph Masessa, believing he would be seen by the dermatolog­ist. Instead, physician assistants examined him.

Although Masessa signed Dalman’s chart, Dalman never met him. Masessa did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

On the day of Dalman’s surgery, he worried that a physician assistant who injected him with anesthetic would be doing the procedure and decided to make a swift exit.

Dalman later went to see Dr. Joseph Francis, a dermatolog­ist near West Palm Beach, who said he was shocked not only by the number of biopsies that had been taken at once, but by the aggressive treatment proposed. He, instead, scraped off the spots and said radiation wasn’t necessary.

Moreover, when Francis examined the patient, he noticed a pigmented, asymmetric­al spot slightly bigger than a pencil eraser on Dalman’s shoulder.

It turned out to be a malignant melanoma, not documented by the physician assistant. Francis removed it before it had a chance to spread.

 ?? [JOSH RICHIE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? John Dalman, 69, walked out of a dermatolog­y clinic in Florida to seek a second opinion while waiting for surgery recommende­d by a young physician assistant. The number of skin cancer diagnoses in people older than 65 is soaring, but some medical...
[JOSH RICHIE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] John Dalman, 69, walked out of a dermatolog­y clinic in Florida to seek a second opinion while waiting for surgery recommende­d by a young physician assistant. The number of skin cancer diagnoses in people older than 65 is soaring, but some medical...
 ?? [JENNIFER SENS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Employees work the phones in the call center of Advanced Dermatolog­y and Cosmetic Surgery, the largest dermatolog­y practice in the United States, in Maitland, Florida. Its database shows 4 million active or recently establishe­d patients.
[JENNIFER SENS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] Employees work the phones in the call center of Advanced Dermatolog­y and Cosmetic Surgery, the largest dermatolog­y practice in the United States, in Maitland, Florida. Its database shows 4 million active or recently establishe­d patients.
 ?? [JENNIFER SENS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Dr. Matt Leavitt is founder and chief executive of Advanced Dermatolog­y and Cosmetic Surgery in Florida.
[JENNIFER SENS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] Dr. Matt Leavitt is founder and chief executive of Advanced Dermatolog­y and Cosmetic Surgery in Florida.

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