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Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases

BACKGROUND: Teledermoscopy (TDS) improves diagnostic accuracy and decreases the number of unnecessary consultations. OBJECTIVES: To determine the diagnostic concordance in tertiary (dermatologist-to-experts) TDS with histopathology/follow-up–based diagnosis. METHODS: A descriptive retrospective coho...

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Autores principales: Marchetti, Anne, Dalle, Stephane, Maucort-Boulch, Delphine, Amini-Adl, Mona, Debarbieux, Sébastien, Poulalhon, Nicolas, Perier-Muzet, Marie, Phan, Alice, Thomas, Luc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Dermoscopy Society 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7319786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32642316
http://dx.doi.org/10.5826/dpc.1003a71
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author Marchetti, Anne
Dalle, Stephane
Maucort-Boulch, Delphine
Amini-Adl, Mona
Debarbieux, Sébastien
Poulalhon, Nicolas
Perier-Muzet, Marie
Phan, Alice
Thomas, Luc
author_facet Marchetti, Anne
Dalle, Stephane
Maucort-Boulch, Delphine
Amini-Adl, Mona
Debarbieux, Sébastien
Poulalhon, Nicolas
Perier-Muzet, Marie
Phan, Alice
Thomas, Luc
author_sort Marchetti, Anne
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Teledermoscopy (TDS) improves diagnostic accuracy and decreases the number of unnecessary consultations. OBJECTIVES: To determine the diagnostic concordance in tertiary (dermatologist-to-experts) TDS with histopathology/follow-up–based diagnosis. METHODS: A descriptive retrospective cohort study including 290 requests. RESULTS: Perfect diagnostic concordance was found in 202 (69.7%) cases and partial agreement in 29 (10%). Disagreement was found in 59 (20.3%) cases. Perfect concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was found in 227 (78.3%) cases and disagreement in 63 (21.7%). In onychology, diagnostic concordance was perfect in 43 (76.8%) cases, partial in 7 (12.5%), and there was disagreement in 6 (10.7%). Final concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was perfect in 48 (85.7%) and there was disagreement in 8 (14.3%) nail cases. For pediatric requests, diagnostic concordance was perfect in 29 (65.9%) cases, partial in 5 (11.4%), and there was disagreement in 10 (22.7%). Final concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was observed in 34 (77.3%) cases, disagreement in 10 (22.7%). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms that tertiary TDS improves diagnostic accuracy of pigmented skin lesions. Moreover, it shows encouraging results in unusual conditions such as ungual and pediatric skin tumors. The main limitation was the retrospective nature and the “real-life” setting of our study that could have created a selection bias toward inclusion of the most difficult cases.
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spelling pubmed-73197862020-07-07 Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases Marchetti, Anne Dalle, Stephane Maucort-Boulch, Delphine Amini-Adl, Mona Debarbieux, Sébastien Poulalhon, Nicolas Perier-Muzet, Marie Phan, Alice Thomas, Luc Dermatol Pract Concept Research BACKGROUND: Teledermoscopy (TDS) improves diagnostic accuracy and decreases the number of unnecessary consultations. OBJECTIVES: To determine the diagnostic concordance in tertiary (dermatologist-to-experts) TDS with histopathology/follow-up–based diagnosis. METHODS: A descriptive retrospective cohort study including 290 requests. RESULTS: Perfect diagnostic concordance was found in 202 (69.7%) cases and partial agreement in 29 (10%). Disagreement was found in 59 (20.3%) cases. Perfect concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was found in 227 (78.3%) cases and disagreement in 63 (21.7%). In onychology, diagnostic concordance was perfect in 43 (76.8%) cases, partial in 7 (12.5%), and there was disagreement in 6 (10.7%). Final concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was perfect in 48 (85.7%) and there was disagreement in 8 (14.3%) nail cases. For pediatric requests, diagnostic concordance was perfect in 29 (65.9%) cases, partial in 5 (11.4%), and there was disagreement in 10 (22.7%). Final concordance on the benign/malignant nature of the lesion was observed in 34 (77.3%) cases, disagreement in 10 (22.7%). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms that tertiary TDS improves diagnostic accuracy of pigmented skin lesions. Moreover, it shows encouraging results in unusual conditions such as ungual and pediatric skin tumors. The main limitation was the retrospective nature and the “real-life” setting of our study that could have created a selection bias toward inclusion of the most difficult cases. International Dermoscopy Society 2020-06-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7319786/ /pubmed/32642316 http://dx.doi.org/10.5826/dpc.1003a71 Text en ©2020 Marchetti et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research
Marchetti, Anne
Dalle, Stephane
Maucort-Boulch, Delphine
Amini-Adl, Mona
Debarbieux, Sébastien
Poulalhon, Nicolas
Perier-Muzet, Marie
Phan, Alice
Thomas, Luc
Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title_full Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title_fullStr Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title_short Diagnostic Concordance in Tertiary (Dermatologists-to-Experts) Teledermoscopy: A Final Diagnosis-Based Study on 290 Cases
title_sort diagnostic concordance in tertiary (dermatologists-to-experts) teledermoscopy: a final diagnosis-based study on 290 cases
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7319786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32642316
http://dx.doi.org/10.5826/dpc.1003a71
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