Top Skin Cancer Providers in Peterlee

Best Skin Cancer Practitioners in Peterlee

Dr Tracey Hopwood

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Dr Tracey Hopwood
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Registered General Practitioner

Rating
(17 reviews)
Location
Peterlee SR8 3BS, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Skin-cancer Treatment in Peterlee

Our dataset currently has 3 clinic(s), with approximately 79 reviews and an average rating of 4.833333333.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Primary care led infrastructure
    • GP practices within Easington Central Primary Care Network
    • Secondary/tertiary care accessed via University Hospital of North Durham and Sunderland Royal Hospital.

Local Aethetics Market:

    Early-to-mid stage maturity with doctor-led compliance and brand accreditation emerging.

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 Peterlee

      • 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:

        • Bus connectivity within Peterlee town centre
        • Nearest rail access via Seaham/Horden stations connecting to Durham and Newcastle.

      Parking availability:

        Typical town-centre free or low-cost parking infrastructure.

      Clinic distribution:

        Clinics likely concentrated within town-centre commercial zones rather than dispersed suburban model.

      Airport proximity:

        Approximately 25–30 miles to Newcastle International Airport.

      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) for regulated activities in England.

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • Low for cosmetic injectables (elective procedures typically self-funded)
            • Dermatology consultations may be covered under select private health policies.

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            UK-wide growth of third-party finance providers (e.g., regulated credit brokers) commonly used for higher-ticket treatments such as RF microneedling packages.

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.833333333

              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.