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Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice

Background: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, teledermoscopy has been increasingly used in the remote diagnosis of skin cancers. In a study conducted in 2020, we demonstrated a potential role of an inexpensive device (Nurugo(TM) Derma) as a first triage to select the skin lesions that require a face-to-...

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Autores principales: Veronese, Federica, Tarantino, Vanessa, Zavattaro, Elisa, Biacchi, Francesca, Airoldi, Chiara, Salvi, Massimo, Seoni, Silvia, Branciforti, Francesco, Meiburger, Kristen M., Savoia, Paola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9221805/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35741181
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12061371
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author Veronese, Federica
Tarantino, Vanessa
Zavattaro, Elisa
Biacchi, Francesca
Airoldi, Chiara
Salvi, Massimo
Seoni, Silvia
Branciforti, Francesco
Meiburger, Kristen M.
Savoia, Paola
author_facet Veronese, Federica
Tarantino, Vanessa
Zavattaro, Elisa
Biacchi, Francesca
Airoldi, Chiara
Salvi, Massimo
Seoni, Silvia
Branciforti, Francesco
Meiburger, Kristen M.
Savoia, Paola
author_sort Veronese, Federica
collection PubMed
description Background: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, teledermoscopy has been increasingly used in the remote diagnosis of skin cancers. In a study conducted in 2020, we demonstrated a potential role of an inexpensive device (Nurugo(TM) Derma) as a first triage to select the skin lesions that require a face-to-face consultation with dermatologists. Herein, we report the results of a novel study that aimed to better investigate the performance of Nurugo(TM). Objectives: (i) verify whether the Nurugo(TM) can be a communication tool between the general practitioner (GP) and dermatologist in the first assessment of skin lesions, (ii) analyze the degree of diagnostic–therapeutic agreement between dermatologists, (iii) estimate the number of potentially serious diagnostic errors. Methods: One hundred and forty-four images of skin lesions were collected at the Dermatology Outpatient Clinic in Novara using a conventional dermatoscope (instrument F), the Nurugo(TM) (instrument N), and the latter with the interposition of a laboratory slide (instrument V). The images were evaluated in-blind by four dermatologists, and each was asked to make a diagnosis and to specify a possible treatment. Results: Our data show that F gave higher agreement values for all dermatologists, concerning the real clinical diagnosis. Nevertheless, a medium/moderate agreement value was obtained also for N and V instruments and that can be considered encouraging and indicate that all examined tools can potentially be used for the first screening of skin lesions. The total amount of misclassified lesions was limited (especially with the V tool), with up to nine malignant lesions wrongly classified as benign. Conclusions: Nurugo(TM), with adequate training, can be used to build a specific support network between GP and dermatologist or between dermatologists. Furthermore, its use could be extended to the diagnosis and follow-up of other skin diseases, especially for frail patients in emergencies, such as the current pandemic context.
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spelling pubmed-92218052022-06-24 Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice Veronese, Federica Tarantino, Vanessa Zavattaro, Elisa Biacchi, Francesca Airoldi, Chiara Salvi, Massimo Seoni, Silvia Branciforti, Francesco Meiburger, Kristen M. Savoia, Paola Diagnostics (Basel) Article Background: Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, teledermoscopy has been increasingly used in the remote diagnosis of skin cancers. In a study conducted in 2020, we demonstrated a potential role of an inexpensive device (Nurugo(TM) Derma) as a first triage to select the skin lesions that require a face-to-face consultation with dermatologists. Herein, we report the results of a novel study that aimed to better investigate the performance of Nurugo(TM). Objectives: (i) verify whether the Nurugo(TM) can be a communication tool between the general practitioner (GP) and dermatologist in the first assessment of skin lesions, (ii) analyze the degree of diagnostic–therapeutic agreement between dermatologists, (iii) estimate the number of potentially serious diagnostic errors. Methods: One hundred and forty-four images of skin lesions were collected at the Dermatology Outpatient Clinic in Novara using a conventional dermatoscope (instrument F), the Nurugo(TM) (instrument N), and the latter with the interposition of a laboratory slide (instrument V). The images were evaluated in-blind by four dermatologists, and each was asked to make a diagnosis and to specify a possible treatment. Results: Our data show that F gave higher agreement values for all dermatologists, concerning the real clinical diagnosis. Nevertheless, a medium/moderate agreement value was obtained also for N and V instruments and that can be considered encouraging and indicate that all examined tools can potentially be used for the first screening of skin lesions. The total amount of misclassified lesions was limited (especially with the V tool), with up to nine malignant lesions wrongly classified as benign. Conclusions: Nurugo(TM), with adequate training, can be used to build a specific support network between GP and dermatologist or between dermatologists. Furthermore, its use could be extended to the diagnosis and follow-up of other skin diseases, especially for frail patients in emergencies, such as the current pandemic context. MDPI 2022-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9221805/ /pubmed/35741181 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12061371 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Veronese, Federica
Tarantino, Vanessa
Zavattaro, Elisa
Biacchi, Francesca
Airoldi, Chiara
Salvi, Massimo
Seoni, Silvia
Branciforti, Francesco
Meiburger, Kristen M.
Savoia, Paola
Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title_full Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title_fullStr Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title_full_unstemmed Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title_short Teledermoscopy in the Diagnosis of Melanocytic and Non-Melanocytic Skin Lesions: Nurugo(TM) Derma Smartphone Microscope as a Possible New Tool in Daily Clinical Practice
title_sort teledermoscopy in the diagnosis of melanocytic and non-melanocytic skin lesions: nurugo(tm) derma smartphone microscope as a possible new tool in daily clinical practice
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9221805/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35741181
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12061371
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