Non-melanoma skin cancers presented a significant incidence increase in the last decades, worldwidely. Even though the impact upon mortality is a relatively low one, through the incidence increase, their impact upon the public healthcare systems is a considerable one. In our study, we evaluated 109 cases of skin carcinomas hospitalized during 2012 in the Department of Plastic Surgery of the Emergency Hospital of Pitesti, Romania, for a surgical treatment. The gender distribution showed slight lesion predominance in women, being recorded 56 (51.38%) tumors in women and 53 (48.62%) in men. The highest incidence of skin carcinomas (75.23%) was recorded in the persons aged over 60-year-old. Of 109 cases of skin carcinomas, 80 (73.4%) carcinomas developed on indignant tegument areas, while 29 (26.6%) on premalignant skin lesions (fiberconjunctive papillomas, keratocantomas, keratosic verrucas). The histopathological study highlighted the fact that of 109 skin carcinomas, 87 (79.82%) were basal cell carcinomas and only 22 (20.18%) were squamous cell carcinomas. The immunohistochemical reaction to 34βE12 cytokeratin was highly positive in the cells of the basal cell carcinomas and well-differentiated squamous cell carcinomas (except for the "keratosic pearls") and moderately positive in the moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma.