Top Skin Cancer Providers in Kingston

Best Skin Cancer Practitioners in Kingston

Skin-cancer Treatment in Kingston

Our dataset currently has 10 clinic(s), with approximately 488 reviews and an average rating of 4.97.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Kingston Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (acute hospital)
    • Multiple NHS GP practices within Kingston GP Chambers / Primary Care Networks
    • Numerous CQC-registered independent clinics

Local Aethetics Market:

    • Highly mature and saturated
    • Strong digital competition and brand differentiation required

Goals of Skin-cancer Treatment

  • Detect it as early as possible so treatment is more effective and simpler (early melanoma has near-100% cure rates).
  • Remove or destroy all cancer cells while preserving as much healthy tissue as possible.
  • Prevent spread (metastasis) especially in melanoma and high-risk SCC.
  • Reduce likelihood of recurrence with appropriate follow-up and surveillance.

Skin-cancer Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • For actual skin cancer, non-surgical alternatives like creams or topical treatments only apply in limited scenarios (actinic keratosis or very superficial BCC with imiquimod/5-FU), and youd discuss those with a specialist. Most skin cancers require surgical removal as the cornerstone. Other options like radiotherapy or systemic therapy (immunotherapy/chemotherapy) are used depending on type and stage.

Pros of Skin-cancer Treatment

    Cons of Skin-cancer Treatment

      Cost of Skin-cancer Treatment in Kingston

      • For individual lesion diagnosis and removal privately (like suspect moles), prices often sit around GBP 775-GBP 930 including biopsy and histology.
      • NHS care is free at the point of delivery for medically necessary treatment, but private costs vary widely based on clinic, complexity, cosmetic considerations and follow-up needs.
      • Whether care is through NHS or private practice.
      • Type of cancer and complexity (e.g. melanoma versus small BCC).
      • Clinic reputation, surgeon experience and geography.
      • Inclusion of diagnostics (biopsies, imaging, histology) and aftercare.
      • Some advanced treatments (immunotherapy, radiotherapy) come with higher cost profiles.

      Accessibility

      Public transport:

        • Kingston railway station (direct to London Waterloo)
        • Extensive bus network
        • Proximity to A3 road corridor

      Parking availability:

        • Town centre multi-storey and retail parking
        • Congestion typical of busy retail hub

      Clinic distribution:

        • Clustered in Kingston town centre retail and commercial units
        • Some suburban high-street clinics

      Airport proximity:

        • Approximately 30–45 minutes to Heathrow Airport
        • 45–60 minutes to Gatwick (traffic dependent)

      Preparing for Your Skin-cancer Appointment

        Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

          Yes, NICE has specific guidance on the assessment and management of melanoma (NG14) and quality standards for skin cancer care that cover prevention, diagnosis, referral and treatment. These guidelines help standardise care and improve outcomes. The MHRA regulates drugs and medical devices used in treatment, and broader clinical practice standards apply.

          Local regulatory authority:

            • Care Quality Commission (CQC)
            • General Medical Council (GMC)
            • General Dental Council (GDC)
            • Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC)

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • Dermatology and rhinoplasty may be partially insured depending on indication
            • Majority of cosmetic treatments self-funded

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            Widely available through third-party regulated lenders for high-ticket procedures (CoolSculpting, rhinoplasty)

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.97

              Recovery & Long-Term Results

                Aftercare:
                • For actual skin cancer, non-surgical alternatives like creams or topical treatments only apply in limited scenarios (actinic keratosis or very superficial BCC with imiquimod/5-FU), and youd discuss those with a specialist. Most skin cancers require surgical removal as the cornerstone. Other options like radiotherapy or systemic therapy (immunotherapy/chemotherapy) are used depending on type and stage.