| Literature DB >> 31712348 |
Clare Amy Primiero1, Aideen M McInerney-Leo1, Brigid Betz-Stablein1, David C Whiteman2, Louisa Gordon3,4,5, Liam Caffery1,6,7, Joanne F Aitken5,8,9, Elizabeth Eakin10, Sonya Osborne11, Len Gray6, B Mark Smithers10,12, Monika Janda1,6, H Peter Soyer13,7, Anna Finnane5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Melanoma is Australia's fourth most common cancer. Early detection is fundamental in maximising health outcomes and minimising treatment costs. To date, population-based screening programmes have not been justified in health economic studies. However, a skin surveillance approach targeting high-risk individuals could improve the cost-benefit ratio. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This paper describes a 2-year longitudinal randomised controlled trial (RCT) to compare routine clinical care (control) with an intensive skin surveillance programme (intervention) consisting of novel three-dimensional (3D) total-body photography (TBP), sequential digital dermoscopy and melanoma-risk stratification, in a high-risk melanoma cohort. Primary outcomes will evaluate clinical, economic and consumer impact of the intervention. Clinical outcomes will evaluate differences in the rate of lesion excisions/biopsies per person, benign to malignant ratio for excisions and thickness of melanomas diagnosed. A health economic analysis using government data repositories will capture healthcare utilisation and costs relating to skin surveillance. Consumer questionnaires will examine intervention acceptability, the psychological impact, and attitudes towards melanoma risk and sun protective behaviour. Secondary outcomes include the development of a holistic risk algorithm incorporating clinical, phenotypic and genetic factors to facilitate the identification of those most likely to benefit from this surveillance approach. Furthermore, the feasibility of integrating the intervention with teledermatology to enhance specialist care in remote locations will be evaluated. This will be the first RCT to compare a targeted surveillance programme utilising new 3D TBP technology against current routine clinical care for individuals at high risk of melanoma. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has received Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) approval from both Metro South Health HREC (HREC/17/QPAH/816) and The University of Queensland HREC (2018000074). TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ANZCTR12618000267257; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: RCT; early detection; melanoma; total-body photography
Year: 2019 PMID: 31712348 PMCID: PMC6858160 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Primary outcomes and methods assessments
| Outcome category | Themes evaluated | Data source | Time points |
| Clinical | Number and thickness of melanomas (including in situ) found. | Clinical records and pathology reports. | 0, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months |
| Skin excisions/biopsies and the histopathological categorisations. | |||
| Economic | Participant healthcare services utilisation relating to skin surveillance and management. | Participant claims through the Medicare Benefits Schedule and Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. | One-off extraction capturing the entire study period of 0–24 months |
| Queensland Hospital Admitted Patient Data Collection database, the Healthcare Purchasing and System Performance data and the Health Service Funding Models. | |||
| Consumer | Satisfaction and acceptability | Self-administered, validated questionnaire | 0 and 24 months |
| Health behaviours | Self-administered, validated questionnaire adapted from QSkin study to capture sun protective behaviours and relevant demographics. | 0, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months | |
| Psychological well-being | Euro-QoL-5D, | 0, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months | |
| Health beliefs | The validated Health Beliefs Survey | 0, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months |
Figure 1Overview of participant timeline and assessments.
Secondary outcomes and methods assessments
| Outcome category | Factors evaluated | Data source | Time points |
| Feasibility of telehealth approach | Technical feasibility of telehealth network for remote dermatological review of 3D TBP–SDDI images, and interoperability with hospital image repositories and integrated electronic medical records |
Investigate subsystems for image acquisition, storage and display by measuring network throughput (bandwidth) and latency between subsystems. Measure data volume and transmission time per 3D TBP–SDDI examination. Assess the compression ratio of transmitted image files necessary to achieve adequate functionality. Evaluate success of transmission and integrity of data. | 24 months |
| Accuracy of telehealth skin examinations | Safety and accuracy of teledermatology review of 3D TBP–SDDI images |
Review the concordance between provisional diagnosis and clinical management decisions of the teledermatologist to the gold standard of in-person dermatological assessment. Assess comparative diagnostic accuracy between in-person clinical diagnosis, teledermatological diagnosis and histopathological diagnoses. | 0–24 months |
| Melanoma-risk stratification in a high-risk population | Genetic results |
Saliva samples collected using Oragene DNA self-collection kit. Methods for sample processing described previously. | Baseline |
|
Whole exome sequencing or Sanger sequencing used to identify rare, pathogenic, germline variants in known melanoma genes. Common variants associated with melanoma risk will be genotyped using Illumina CoreExomev24 chip array. | 12–24 months | ||
| Sun behaviour |
Self-administered, previously validated sun behaviour questionnaire to record sun protective behaviour, sun exposure, sunburn history, personal and family skin cancer history, and relevant demographic information. | Baseline | |
| Deep phenotyping |
Documentation of eye, hair and skin colour. Spectrophotometer readings for skin colour on the right arm including the proximal anterior bicep, proximal anterior forearm and proximal posterior forearm, using Spectrometer CM-600d (Konica Minolta, Osaka, Japan). Digital photographs of participant’s irises using a Nikon D3400 digital single-lens reflex camera (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan). Freckling on the face, dorsum of right hand and shoulders are rated 0–4 (none, mild, moderate, severe) to produce an overall freckling score. | Baseline |
3D, three dimensional; SDDI, sequential digital dermoscopy imaging; TBP, total-body photography.