Jonathan A Fee1, Finbar P McGrady1, Cliff Rosendahl2,3, Nigel D Hart1. 1. Centre for Medical Education, Queen's University Belfast, UK. 2. School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, Brisbane, Australia. 3. School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients in many countries with new or changing skin lesions will first consult a primary care physician, often called a general practitioner (GP). With the dramatic rise in melanoma incidence over recent decades, dermoscopy offers a tool with an evidence base supporting its use in skin lesion assessment. How GPs use dermoscopy is unclear. OBJECTIVES: A scoping literature review was carried out to examine the current state of published evidence about dermoscopy use in primary care. METHODS: The methodological steps taken in this review followed those developed by Arksey and O'Malley, as revised by Levac and colleagues. Four electronic databases were searched for evidence published up to January 2018 describing the use of dermoscopy in a generalist primary care setting. Seven articles were identified for analysis. RESULTS: All included articles have been published since 2007. Most were questionnaire studies and revealed that generally a small minority of GPs use dermoscopy, although some jurisdictions such as Australia report greater use. Dermoscopy is generally used only for the assessment of pigmented skin lesions, but is not used consistently. Several perceived barriers to dermoscopy use, including the need for training, have been reported. CONCLUSIONS: There is a paucity of data on dermoscopy use among GPs, and diversity in questionnaire items prevents comparison between jurisdictions. Perceived barriers to dermoscopy use require more in-depth exploration, potentially including qualitative data, to evaluate them more fully. Understanding these factors, including how GPs train in dermoscopy, will be crucial in widening dermoscopy use in primary care.
BACKGROUND: Patients in many countries with new or changing skin lesions will first consult a primary care physician, often called a general practitioner (GP). With the dramatic rise in melanoma incidence over recent decades, dermoscopy offers a tool with an evidence base supporting its use in skin lesion assessment. How GPs use dermoscopy is unclear. OBJECTIVES: A scoping literature review was carried out to examine the current state of published evidence about dermoscopy use in primary care. METHODS: The methodological steps taken in this review followed those developed by Arksey and O'Malley, as revised by Levac and colleagues. Four electronic databases were searched for evidence published up to January 2018 describing the use of dermoscopy in a generalist primary care setting. Seven articles were identified for analysis. RESULTS: All included articles have been published since 2007. Most were questionnaire studies and revealed that generally a small minority of GPs use dermoscopy, although some jurisdictions such as Australia report greater use. Dermoscopy is generally used only for the assessment of pigmented skin lesions, but is not used consistently. Several perceived barriers to dermoscopy use, including the need for training, have been reported. CONCLUSIONS: There is a paucity of data on dermoscopy use among GPs, and diversity in questionnaire items prevents comparison between jurisdictions. Perceived barriers to dermoscopy use require more in-depth exploration, potentially including qualitative data, to evaluate them more fully. Understanding these factors, including how GPs train in dermoscopy, will be crucial in widening dermoscopy use in primary care.
Entities:
Keywords:
cancer; dermoscopy; general practice; melanoma; primary health care
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