HUNDREDS of cancer patients in Dorset waited two months or more to start treatment following a referral from their GP.

Between October 2017 and September 2018, 2,996 cancer patients were urgently referred to hospital by their GP, but 519 did not start their treatment within 62 days, according to the latest NHS figures.

The Government has a target of 85 per cent of referrals to start treatment within two months.

This is to allow for the minority of patients who choose to delay their course of treatment. This may include chemotherapy, surgery or radiation therapy.

Of Dorset Clinical Commissioning Group’s cancer patients, 83 per cent began treatment within two months of an urgent GP referral, which is slightly below the NHS target.

That is lower than in 2016-17, when 86 per cent of patients started treatment two months after referral, which is above the NHS target.

Dr Fran Woodard, executive director of policy and impact at Macmillan Cancer Support, said: “These figures are further evidence of a worrying trend which demonstrates that the pressure on cancer services is truly beginning to bite.

“We must not forget that at the heart of these figures are thousands of cancer patients anxiously waiting for referral for diagnosis or to start treatment.”

She said it is “imperative” the Government addresses the challenges facing the workforce in the NHS Long Term Plan.

“We cannot expect world-class cancer care for patients in the future without enough staff with the right skills to deliver it.”

Across England the percentage of patients starting treatment within two months has dropped from 87 per cent in 2012-2013, to 80 per cent in the first half of 2018-19.

The operational target has not been hit since 2013.

Dr Nicola Strickland, president of the Royal College of Radiologists, said: “More evidence of the ongoing downward trend away from the NHS’s 62 day referral to treatment target is stark but unsurprising in view of the increasing referral rates for suspected cancer.

“The cancer care system is having to treat more and more patients with rationed workforce, equipment and support, when it urgently needs more capacity.”

Dr Strickland said more oncologists and radiologists need to be recruited urgently.

She added: “It’s hard to imagine waiting time figures improving anytime soon.”

An NHS England spokeswoman said: “Thanks to greater awareness, more people are coming forward for prostate cancer checks, the NHS is treating more patients than ever before, and NHS England recently announced an injection of £10m to treat the extra people who are coming forward.”