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Edinburgh HSCP Minor Surgery Service

Information 

  • We offer only routine appointments and there is no facility to see patients urgently.
  • We can only see patients that are registered with a GP in the Edinburgh locality.
  • This service is a lesions removal service. Patients should not be sent for an ‘opinion’. If you are uncertain of the diagnosis then the patient should be referred to dermatology.
  • Referrals will be triaged and patients will either be appointed to a consultation for assessment or straight to an appointment for removal of the lesion. The letter that they receive will indicate this. 
  • The locality surgeons reserve the right to decline to remove lesions which do not meet the guidelines or are inappropriate for the locality minor surgery service.

Patients should be seen in person, and the lesion examined, before a referral is made to the service. Patients may currently wait a considerable time to be seen in clinic and it is not appropriate for them to be added to a routine waiting list if they have not been examined first. 

Who to refer:

  • We accept referrals for patients of 12 years and over who are capable of consenting to and co-operating with the intended procedure.
  • Benign lesions (more than 5mm in size) these will only be removed if they are causing “significant disability” (e.g. pain, recurrent infection, bleeding, functional problems, recurrent trauma and recurrent/risk of infection) Please make this clear if this is the reason for referral.
  • See primary care management Tab for advice on specific conditions.

Who not to refer: 

  • This service is NOT appropriate for suspected cancers. Suspected skin cancers should be referred urgently to Dermatology or plastic surgery.
  • Lesions where there is diagnostic uncertainty or for diagnostic biopsy.
  • Patients that do not meet the referral criteria (see who to refer).
  • Patients with skin tags unless they are more than 5mm in size and causing significant disability.
  • Cysts/Lipomas less than 1.5cm or more than 5cm in size.
  • Cosmetically sensitive surgery (e.g. facial lesions). These should be referred to plastic surgery.
  • Lesions that do not meet the referral criteria but the patient finds cosmetically unacceptable. These should be referred to Plastic surgery under the Exceptional Aesthetic Referral Pathway (EARP). https://apps.nhslothian.scot/refhelp/PlasticSurgery/AestheticSurger
  • Warts that have not been treated with topical treatment for AT LEAST 3 MONTHS.

How to refer: 

  • Refer Via Sci Gateway under Leith Community Treatment Centre; Locality Minor Surgery Service

Skin Tags:

These are soft flesh coloured or pigmented pedunculated tags in body folds (neck, armpit, groin). They should NOT be referred unless they meet the criteria for removal of benign lesions. Small (few mm in size) skin tags rarely cause significant disability. Patients should be advised that they can remove small (few mm in size) skin tags themselves with suitably disinfected nail clippers or scissors. We are unable to see patients for removal of skin tags unless the lesion is greater than 5mm and causing significant disability. When they are treated at the LCTC clinic local anaesthetic is often not used and they are simply snipped off by the locality surgeon.

Dermatofibromata:

A dermatofibroma is a benign skin lesion. The exact aetiology is uncertain, some believe it to represent a traumatic fibrotic dermal reaction to a minor injury such as an insect bite.. They require a full thickness excision of the skin and effectively replace one scarring reaction with a potentially larger one. The preferred management is to leave them alone.

http://www.pcds.org.uk/clinical-guidance/dermatofibroma-syn.-histiocytoma

Epidermoid (sebaceous/pilar) cysts:

An epidermoid cyst is a very common cyst that contains keratin and its breakdown products, surrounded by an epidermoid wall. Morphologically it is a smooth mobile flesh coloured nodule within and fixed to overlying skin, the presence of punctum helps confirm diagnosis

Do not refer until they have reached a minimum diameter of 1.5 cm and they meet the referral criteria for a benign lesion. Cysts greater than 5cm should be referred to General Surgery at RIE. Please do NOT refer cysts whilst acutely infected but first treat them with a course of antibiotics and review after 6 weeks. If the cyst is still present, and more than 1.5cm, then referral to the Minor Surgery Service may be appropriate.  Many cysts will resolve after they have been infected and do not require surgical removal. We are not able to provide a service for the incision and drainage of acutely infected cysts. If this is required, it would need to be done in the GP practice or at A&E.

http://www.pcds.org.uk/clinical-guidance/epidermoid-cyst

Lipomata:

Lipomas are a common benign tumour of adipose tissue are usually found in the subcutaneous tissue. Morphologically they are a subcutaneous nodule, often lobulated, with a soft doughy consistency. The overlying skin surface is normal and freely mobile over the lipoma. Lesions are often 2-10 cm in diameter but can be much larger. Do not refer lipomas to the minor surgery service if they exceed 5cm in any plane or are on the head and neck but instead should be referred to General Surgery at RIE.

There is a higher chance of liposarcoma in lesions greater than 5cm. If the soft tissue mass is not clinically typical of a lipoma or if it is a rapidly enlarging soft tissue mass then these should be referred to the USOC Orthopaedic Sarcoma service at RIE.  

http://www.pcds.org.uk/clinical-guidance/lipoma

Seborrhoeic Keratoses:

A seborrhoeic keratosis (SK) is a benign overgrowth of epidermal keratinocytes, and is of unknown aetiology.

They are yellow/brown greasy papules or rough grey/black hyperkeratotic papules with a ‘stuck-on’ appearance. They are often multiple and most commonly found on  the face and trunk and face though they can be found on any body site the presence of keratin plugs (inclusion cysts) may help differentiate them from melanoma. If diagnosis certain reassure that no treatment is needed unless they meet the benign lesion referral criteria.

http://www.pcds.org.uk/clinical-guidance/seborrhoeic-keratosis-syn.-seborrhoeic-wart-basal-cell-papilloma

Warts:

Warts are caused by a common viral infection, the human papillomavirus (HPV). Most resolve spontaneously within a year or two. They may vary in appearance depending on the types of HPV, the anatomical site involved and the host immune response. They often have small black dots, representing coagulated capillaries, particularly evident on paring.
Most patients with viral warts can be managed in primary care:

  • Consider no treatment as warts usually resolve spontaneously
  • Self treatment daily with salicylic acid paints or gels after paring the warts
  • Continue treatment for at least three months
  • Consider 3 weekly Cryotherapy by practice nurse in non-responders but use in combination with topical therapy

Patient information: https://www.bad.org.uk/shared/get-file.ashx?id=176&itemtype=document

http://www.pcds.org.uk/clinical-guidance/warts

Benign Melanocytic Naevi:

Benign Melanocytic Naevi should only be referred if there is repeated trauma or there is significant disability. If there is any suspicion of malignancy then refer to Dermatology.

If a patient requests removal of a lesion for cosmetic reasons then a referral must be made via the Exceptional Aesthetic Referral Pathway (EARP):

https://apps.nhslothian.scot/refhelp/PlasticSurgery/AestheticSurgery

Scottish Government exceptional Referral Protocol – www.sehd.scot.nhs.uk/cmo/CMO(2019)05.pdf