| Literature DB >> 31540342 |
Mihai Lupu1, Iris Maria Popa2, Vlad Mihai Voiculescu3,4, Ana Caruntu5,6, Constantin Caruntu7,8.
Abstract
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common cancer worldwide and its incidence is constantly rising. Early diagnosis and treatment can significantly reduce patient morbidity and healthcare costs. The value of reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) in non-melanoma skin cancer diagnosis is still under debate. This systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted to assess the diagnostic accuracy of RCM in primary BCC. PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched up to July 05, 2019, to collect articles concerning primary BCC diagnosis through RCM. The studies' methodological quality was assessed by the QUADAS-2 tool. The meta-analysis was conducted using Stata 13.0, RevMan 5.0, and MetaDisc 1.4 software. We included 15 studies totaling a number of 4163 lesions. The pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.92 (95% CI, 0.87-0.95; I2= 85.27%) and 0.93 (95% CI, 0.85-0.97; I2= 94.61%), the pooled positive and negative likelihood ratios were 13.51 (95% CI, 5.8-31.37; I2= 91.01%) and 0.08 (95% CI, 0.05-0.14; I2= 84.83%), and the pooled diagnostic odds ratio was 160.31 (95% CI, 64.73-397.02; I2=71%). Despite the heterogeneity and risk of bias, this study demonstrates that RCM, through its high sensitivity and specificity, may have a significant clinical impact on the diagnosis of primary BCC.Entities:
Keywords: basal cell carcinoma; diagnostic test accuracy; in vivo; meta-analysis; reflectance confocal microscopy; systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31540342 PMCID: PMC6780971 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Screening process and results. Basal cell carcinoma (BCC).
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author, Year, [Reference] | Country | No. of Centers | Study Design | Types of Lesion | No. of Investigators | Experience Level | Reference Standard | RCM device | No.of Patients (M/F) | Age | No. of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Castro et al. 2015 [ | Brazil&USA | 2 | prospective | BCC | 2 | low | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 32 (20/12) | 65 | 54 |
| Gerger et al. 2006 [ | Austria | 1 | prospective | melanoma, BCC, nevi, SebK | 4 | low | clinic & histopathology (excisional) | VivaScope 1500 | 119 (62/57) | n/a | 120 |
| Guitera et al. 2012 [ | Australia&Italy | 2 | prospective | melanoma, BCC, SCC, nevi | 2 | high | histopathology | VivaScope 1000&1500 | 663 (354/309) | 53 | 710 |
| Longo et al. 2013 [ | Italy | 2 | retrospective | melanoma, BCC, SCC, nevi, SebK, DF | 1 | high | histopathology | VivaScope 1000&1500 | 140 (64/76) | 50 | 140 |
| Nori et al. 2004 [ | USA&Spain | 4 | retrospective | BCC, various others | 1 | low | clinical & histopathology (incisional) | VivaScope 1000 & Wellman Laboratories prototype | 145 (n/a) | n/a | 152 |
| Peppelman et al. 2013 [ | Netherlands | 1 | prospective | BCC | n/a | n/a | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 27 (16/11) | 66 | 57 |
| Rao et al. 2013 [ | USA | 1 | retrospective | melanoma, BCC, various benign | 2 | low | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | n/a | n/a | 334 |
| Pellacani et al. 2014 [ | Italy | 1 | prospective | melanoma, BCC, various benign | 1 | n/a | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 408 | 41 | 292 |
| Farnetani et al. 2015 [ | Italy | 1 | retrospective | melanoma, BCC, AKs, various benign | 9 | high & low | histopathology (n/a) | VivaScope 1500 | n/a | n/a | 100 |
| Guitera et al. 2016 [ | Australia&Italy | 3 | retrospective | melanoma, BCC, AKs, various benign | 1 | high | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | n/a | 54.8 | 191 |
| Kadouch et al. 2017 [ | Netherlands | 2 | prospective | BCC | 2 | low | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 46 | 64 | 46 |
| Nelson et al. 2016 [ | USA | 1 | prospective | BCC | 8 | low | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 87 (65/22) | 73 | 100 |
| Witkowski et al. 2015 [ | Italy | 1 | retrospective | BCC, melanoma, SCC, various benign | 1 | n/a | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | n/a | n/a | 260 |
| Peccerillo et al. 2018 [ | Italy | 1 | retrospective | BCC, melanoma, SCC, SebK, DF | 2 | high | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | n/a | n/a | 1484 |
| Lupu et al. 2019 [ | Romania | 2 | retrospective | BCC, SCC, AKs, Bowen’s disease, various benign | 2 | high | histopathology | VivaScope 1500 | 87 (36/51) | 68.1 | 123 |
BCC, basal cell carcinoma; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; SebK, seborrheic keratoses; AKs, actinic keratoses; DF, dermatofibroma; n/a, not available.
Criteria for the diagnosis of basal cell carcinoma in the included studies.
| Author, Year, [Reference] | Reflectance Confocal Microscopic Criteria |
|---|---|
| Castro et al. 2015 [ | hyporefractile silhouettes, tumor islands, epidermal streaming, peripheral palisading, peri-tumoral clefting, peri-tumoral collagen bundles, increased vascularization, dendritic structures |
| Gerger et al. 2006 [ | increased vascularization, epidermal streaming, peri-tumoral collagen bundles |
| Guitera et al. 2012 [ | epidermal streaming, dilated horizontal blood vessels, basaloid cord or nodule, epidermal shadow, glomerular vessels, non-visible dermal papillae, epidermal disarray, dendritic structures, peri-tumoral clefting, cells with visible nuclei inside tumor islands |
| Longo et al. 2013 [ | epidermal disarray, ulceration or erosion, cauliflower architecture, hyporefractile silhouettes, bright filaments inside tumor islands, increased vascularization, inflammatory infiltrate |
| Nori et al. 2004 [ | elongated monomorphic nuclei, inflammatory infiltrate, increased vascularization, epidermal pleomorphism |
| Peppelman et al. 2013 [ | tumor islands, peri-tumoral clefting, peripheral palisading, elongated and polarized nuclei, keratinocyte atypia and spongiosis, solar elastosis, increased vascularization, inflammatory infiltrate, leukocyte rolling |
| Rao et al. 2013 [ | diagnostic criteria not specified |
| Pellacani et al. 2014 [ | diagnostic criteria not specified |
| Farnetani et al. 2015 [ | basaloid cords, ulceration, disarray at the dermal-epidermal junction |
| Guitera et al. 2016 [ | epidermal streaming, basaloid cord or nodule, peri-tumoral fibrilar polarized pattern, peri-tumoral clefting, epidermal shadow, dark nodules, dilated horizontal blood vessels, glomerular vessels |
| Kadouch et al. 2017 [ | diagnostic criteria not specified |
| Nelson et al. 2016 [ | tumor islands, peri-tumoral clefting, hyporefractile silhouettes, canalicular vessels, dendritic cells |
| Witkowski et al. 2015 | diagnostic criteria not specified |
| Peccerillo et al. 2018 [ | mild keratinocyte atypia, streaming epidermis, cords connected to the epidermis, dark silhouettes, peri-tumoral clefts, ulceration/erosion, tumor island size and location (epidermal or dermal), branch-like structures in tumor island, peripheral palisading, vascular morphology (linear or coiled vessels) and diameter, collagen surrounding tumor islands, solar elastosis and inflammatory infiltrates |
| Lupu et al. 2019 [ | keratinocyte atypia, epidermal streaming, ulceration, cords connected to the epidermis, small tumor islands (diameter <300 m), large tumor islands (diameter >300 m), hyporefractile silhouettes, peripheral palisading, clefting, increased vascularization, “onion-like” structures, peri-tumoral collagen bundles, inflammation represented by bright dots and plump bright cells, and dendritic cells inside tumor islands |
Figure 2Included studies according to QUADAS-2 guidelines.
Figure 3Methodological quality assessment via QUADAS-2 tool.
Figure 4Forest plots for individual studies and pooled estimates of sensitivity and specificity with corresponding heterogeneity statistics of reflectance confocal microscopy for the diagnosis of basal cell carcinoma.
Figure 5Curve summarizing reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) sensitivity and specificity forBCC diagnosis.
Results of the meta-regression for heterogeneity sources.
| Covariate | Coefficient | Standard Error |
| RDOR | (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | 2.236 | 0.9 | 0.037 | 9.35 | (1.17; 74.56) |
| RCM device | −0.838 | 1.09 | 0.46 | 0.43 | (0,03; 5.38) |
| Reference standard | 1.184 | 0.54 | 0.06 | 3.27 | (0.93; 11.47) |
| Investigator experience | 0.067 | 0.59 | 0.91 | 1.07 | (0.27; 4.2) |
| Number of centers | 0.561 | 0.79 | 0.5 | 1.75 | (0.28; 10.98) |
RDOR, Relative Diagnostic Odds Ratio; RCM, reflectance confocal microscopy.
Figure 6Plot with pseudo 95% confidence limits in the included studies.
Figure 7Plot of Deeks asymmetry test for publication bias.
Figure 8The consequences of using reflectance confocal microscopy for BCC diagnosis in a cohort of 1000 subjects. The use of RCM would lead to 82 patients being treated, of which 69 would not need to be treated; 918 patients would not be treated, of which only one would have necessitated treatment. BCC, basal cell carcinoma; RCM, reflectance confocal microscopy.