| Literature DB >> 36159122 |
Tova Rogers1, Myles Randolph McCrary1, Howa Yeung1,2, Loren Krueger1, Suephy C Chen2,3.
Abstract
Introduction: Improving remote triage is crucial given expansions in tele-dermatology and with limited in-person care during COVID-19. In addition to clinical pictures, dermoscopic images may provide utility for triage.Entities:
Keywords: dermoscopy; melanoma; skin cancer; tele-dermatology; telemedicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 36159122 PMCID: PMC9464534 DOI: 10.5826/dpc.1203a129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Pract Concept ISSN: 2160-9381
Demographics
| Characteristics, N (%) | |
|---|---|
| Completed Survey | 22/26 (84.6%) |
| Status | |
| Resident | 10/26 (38.5%) |
| Attending | 16/26 (61.5%) |
|
| |
| 1–5 | 4/13 (31%) |
| 6–10 | 4/13 (31%) |
| 11–15 | 1/13 (8%) |
| > 15 | 4/13 (31%) |
|
| |
| < 50% | 13/26 (50%) |
| >/= 50% | 13/26 (50%) |
|
| |
| 0 | 10/22 (45.5%) |
| 1–2 | 9/22 (40.9%) |
| 3–4 | 3/22 (13.6%) |
|
| |
| Not confident | 9/22 (40.9%) |
| Somewhat confident | 13/22 (59.1%) |
| Confident | 0 |
Figure 1Dermoscopy increases % correct diagnoses for malignant lesions. The percentage of correct diagnoses for all cases, non-neoplastic, benign neoplastic, and malignant neoplastic with clinical images only and following dermoscopic images is shown above. Bar graphs illustrate the means with error bars representing 95% confidence intervals. * indicates P < 0.05 at paired t-test.
Figure 2Dermoscopy reduces perceived triage urgency for non-neoplastic lesions. The proportion of respondents that rated non-neoplastic, benign neoplastic, and malignant neoplastic lesions as non-urgent before and after addition of dermoscopy is shown above. Bar graphs illustrate the means. * indicates P < 0.05 at McNemar test.
Figure 3Dermoscopy increases confidence in management decisions. The percentage of confidence for all cases, non-neoplastic, benign neoplastic, and malignant neoplastic with clinical images only and following dermoscopic images is shown above. Bar graphs illustrate the means with error bars representing 95% confidence intervals. * indicates P < 0.05 at paired t-test.
Perceptions of dermoscopy for triage in tele-dermatology described by study participants, presented by theme and subtheme with exemplary quotes.
| Theme and Subtheme | Exemplary Quotes |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Useful for suspected malignancy and pigmented lesions | “Dermoscopy can be very useful for lesions suspicious for malignancy.” |
| Useful for lesions with common dermoscopic morphologies | “Clear features can increase confidence; more obscure structures are less helpful.” |
| Less useful for rashes (of note, there were no rashes included in the survey) | “Dermoscopy for limited portions of an exanthem, especially without history, can be misleading.” |
| Patient history complements dermoscopic images | “I want to know the patient’s problem list and how acute this is relative to other comorbidities.” |
|
| |
| “If you have protocols for taking photos outlined, then that is more helpful. For the most part it’s going to be patients and nurses taking photos, so we need good protocols and feedback mechanisms in place, so protocols are followed.” | |
|
| |
| COVID19 limited availability to dermoscopic images | “I felt handicapped [during COVID19] for neoplastic lesions, dermoscopy is crucial for those.” |
| Hesitancy for consumer dermoscopy | “I also worry that people might think they can interpret [dermoscopic images], which might be a problem. Even medical students don’t get formal training in dermoscopy.” |