Increase in the sensitivity for melanoma diagnosis by primary care physicians using skin surface microscopy

Background Skin surface microscopy (oil epiluminescence microscopy, dermoscopy, dermatoscopy) has been shown to increase the diagnostic accuracy of melanoma. However, all studies to date have been in an expert setting. Objectives To determine whether primary care physicians (PCP) (general practition...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of dermatology (1951) 2000-11, Vol.143 (5), p.1016-1020
Hauptverfasser: Westerhoff, K., Mccarthy, W.H., Menzies, S.W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Skin surface microscopy (oil epiluminescence microscopy, dermoscopy, dermatoscopy) has been shown to increase the diagnostic accuracy of melanoma. However, all studies to date have been in an expert setting. Objectives To determine whether primary care physicians (PCP) (general practitioners) could improve their melanoma diagnosis using surface microscopy after a short education intervention. Methods Seventy‐four practising PCP completed a pretest of 50 melanomas and 50 atypical non‐melanoma pigmented skin lesions (PSL) containing matched clinical and surface microscopy photographs. PCP were randomized between a surface microscopy education intervention or control group, followed by an identical post‐test. Results Following training there was a significant improvement in the post‐test vs. pretest in both clinical melanoma diagnosis (62·7% vs. 54·6%; P = 0·007) and surface microscopy melanoma diagnosis (75·9% vs. 57·8%; P = 0·000007). No difference was found in the control group between the post‐test vs. pretest clinical melanoma diagnosis (53·7% vs. 50·6%; P = 0·21) or the surface microscopy melanoma diagnosis (54·8% vs. 52·9%; P = 0·56). Following training there was a significant improvement in the diagnosis of melanoma using surface microscopy vs. clinical diagnosis (75·9% vs. 62·7%; P = 0·000007), which was absent in the control group (54·8% vs. 53·7%; P = 0·59). No significant difference was found in clinical vs. surface microscopy post‐test results for non‐melanoma PSL in either the intervention group or control group. Improvement in the sensitivity for the diagnosis of melanoma with surface microscopy was seen without a decrease in specificity; this indicated that the effect should occur without increasing the number of needless excisions. Conclusions All PCP in countries where melanoma leads to significant mortality should be trained in skin surface microscopy.
ISSN:0007-0963
1365-2133
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-2133.2000.03836.x