Introduction: The diagnosis of cutaneous pigmented lesions remains a challenge for both dermatologists and pathologists. Our aim was to determine the diagnostic concordance between the conventional face-to-face diagnosis and the telediagnosis of 10 dermatologists with expertise in dermato-oncology of 10 challenging pigmented lesions. Methods: Using a store-and-forward teledermatology method, clinical and dermoscopic digital images of all selected lesions were transmitted via e-mail to 10 dermatologists. Dermatologists were called to provide their telediagnoses with a step-by-step approach. When the dermatologists responded with their first clinical telediagnosis, they received a second email that contained dermoscopic images of the 10 cases. Final histopathological diagnosis was considered the gold standard for comparison with face-to-face and teledermatology diagnoses in statistical analysis. Results: Face-to-face results indicated moderate agreement between clinical and histopathological diagnoses (K = 0.6). After the first clinical step, interobserver concordance of telediagnosis was lower than face-to-face diagnosis (K = 0.52). After the second dermoscopy step, the concordance declined further (K = 0.38). Conclusions: Teledermatology was inferior to face-to-face dermatology. Moreover, the diagnostic concordance of telediagnosis decreased after the teledermoscopic step. This finding may be justified by the dermoscopic difficulty of the selected lesions, including Spitzoid proliferations and atypical melanocytic nevi of the elderly. These lesions may represent a potential diagnostic pitfall given their confounding dermoscopic aspects.
Teledermoscopy in doubtful melanocytic lesions: is it really useful?
COVARELLI, Piero;
2016
Abstract
Introduction: The diagnosis of cutaneous pigmented lesions remains a challenge for both dermatologists and pathologists. Our aim was to determine the diagnostic concordance between the conventional face-to-face diagnosis and the telediagnosis of 10 dermatologists with expertise in dermato-oncology of 10 challenging pigmented lesions. Methods: Using a store-and-forward teledermatology method, clinical and dermoscopic digital images of all selected lesions were transmitted via e-mail to 10 dermatologists. Dermatologists were called to provide their telediagnoses with a step-by-step approach. When the dermatologists responded with their first clinical telediagnosis, they received a second email that contained dermoscopic images of the 10 cases. Final histopathological diagnosis was considered the gold standard for comparison with face-to-face and teledermatology diagnoses in statistical analysis. Results: Face-to-face results indicated moderate agreement between clinical and histopathological diagnoses (K = 0.6). After the first clinical step, interobserver concordance of telediagnosis was lower than face-to-face diagnosis (K = 0.52). After the second dermoscopy step, the concordance declined further (K = 0.38). Conclusions: Teledermatology was inferior to face-to-face dermatology. Moreover, the diagnostic concordance of telediagnosis decreased after the teledermoscopic step. This finding may be justified by the dermoscopic difficulty of the selected lesions, including Spitzoid proliferations and atypical melanocytic nevi of the elderly. These lesions may represent a potential diagnostic pitfall given their confounding dermoscopic aspects.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.