Insights, Advantages, and Barriers of Teledermatology vs. Face-to-Face Dermatology for the Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Teledermatology for Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: Triage in Primary Care
3.2. Diagnostic Concordance of TD vs. FTF: Not Such a Simple Matter
3.3. Some Help along the Way: Introducing Teledermoscopy (TDS) to Facilitate NMSC TD Diagnosis
3.4. Teledermatology and Occupational Dermatology: Screening and Follow-Up of High-Risk Populations
3.5. Image Quality and Digital Health Innovations as a Tool for TD Improvement for Diagnosis of NMSC
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author(s) | Country | Study Design | Study Population (n) | Intervention/Study Arms | Assessment TD Method | Reference Standard | Outcome | Potential Limitations/Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livingstone et al. [8] | United Kingdom | retrospective monocentric comparative study | 248 patients referred after initial GP assessment | Skin cancer diagnosis including NMSC: 102 direct referrals/FTF vs. 146 via TD | SAF: clinical photos | unknown—diagnosis from secondary care provider | TD cost-effective, timely assessment, patient satisfaction | specificity—follow-up for “benign” cases was performed exclusively by GP |
Bianchi et al. [9] | Brazil | retrospective multicenter cohort study | 12,770 lesions/6633 individuals | TD assessment and referral for biopsy OR FTF assessment OR return to GP for treatment | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | 2/3 of cases were returned to GP, AK between the most common diagnoses, comfortable for the elderly | specificity—follow-up for “benign” cases was performed exclusively by GP |
Morton et al. [10] | United Kingdom | prospective monocentric observational study | 642 lesions suspicious for skin cancer | Conventional GP referrals vs. TD consultations prior to FTF assessment/treatment | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | TD use as triage tool, improved waiting times, reduction of the burden of FTF dermatology, photo-triage increased the sensitivity for NMSC | (-) |
Hsiao et al. [11] | United States | retrospective monocentric chart review | 169 patients | patients treated for skin cancer after FTF or TD assessment | SAF: not specified | histopathology | diagnostic accuracy between FTF and TD was comparable for NMSC, wait time to skin cancer surgery for TD was shorter | very specific population characteristics might not mirror the general population |
Massone et al. [12] | Austria | observational multicenter study | 955 lesions | TD evaluation of suspected skin cancer according to pre-trained GPs followed by referral for excision or FTF evaluation or follow-up | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | diagnostic accuracy was 94% and the sensitivity 100%, only 1% of the TD group were referred for an FTF evaluation | (-) |
Naka et al. [13] | United States | descriptive retrospective cohort study | 2385 referrals | TD evaluation (44%) of suspected skin cancer from underserved US populations followed by referral for FTF evaluation or vs. direct FTF evaluation | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | TD reduced wait times, increased primary care satisfaction, no direct head-to head comparison of diagnostic accuracy | very specific population characteristics might not mirror the general population, no data on follow-up of “benign” lesions |
Author(s) | Country | Study Design | Study Population (n) | Intervention/Study Arms | Assessment TD Method | Reference Standard | Outcome | Potential Limitations/Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tandjung et al. [14] | Switzerland | randomized control trial | 979 skin lesions | TD evaluation of images made in primary care and categorization into “no further investigation”, “clinical observation”, “biopsy” and “other”. | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | small number of avoided visits through TD, safety concerns concerning specificity of TD diagnosis (2 NMSC cases missed) | long-term data missing |
Kroemer et al. [15] | Switzerland | comparative prospective study | 113 skin tumors from 88 patients | clinical TD evaluation vs. dermoscopic TD evaluation of GP- and self-referrals for skin tumors and subsequent categorization to benign melanocytic, benign nonmelanocytic, malignant melanocytic and malignant nonmelanocytic lesions | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images with a mobile phone camera | histopathology (malignant tumors) and FTF diagnosis (non-malignant tumors) | high concordance in differentiating benign from malignant (90%), and similar specificity of FTF in comparison to TD for NMSC, no advantages of teledermoscopy over macroscopic TD evaluation | (-) |
Börve et al. [16] | Sweden | open, controlled, multicenter, prospective observational study | 1562 patients | TDS evaluation via smartphone app and compatible digital microscope vs. FTF diagnosis | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | inter-rater agreement of dermatologists after FTF evaluation or histopathology | reduced waiting time from NMSC requiring surgery, increased reliability for triage through TDS, 40% of the patients could have avoided FTF | only 62% of the deemed malignant cases had a histopathologic evaluation |
Jobbàgy et al. [17] | Hungary | retrospective monocentric study | 749 patients with 779 lesions | TD evaluation of skin cancer lesions during the COVID-19 pandemic and categorization in 11 diagnostic groups (among them scc, BCC, AK) and triage groups followed by FTF | SAF: clinical photos | histopathology (malignant lesions) and FTF diagnosis (non-malignant lesions) | diagnostic concordance was substantial for primary (85:3%) and aggregated diagnoses (87:9%), kappa coefficient was moderate for SCC and higher for BCC | precancerous lesions (AK) were included in malignant lesions |
Warshaw et al. [18] | United States | cross-sectional repeated measures equivalence study | 2152 patients with 3021 lesions | TD evaluation of suspected skin cancer referrals and categorization to 1 of 17 diagnoses with up to 2 differential diagnoses, choice between 4 management plans and level of diagnostic confidence followed by FTF | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | Diagnostic agreement had a moderate/substantial kappa of 0:32–0:86 for non-pigmented lesions incl. NMSC | male Caucasian population, teledermatologists were aware of the study, no evaluation of intra-rater reliability |
Lamel et al. [19] | United States | prospective monocentric single-blind observational study | 86 patients with 137 lesions | TD evaluation of lesions during a scan screening event and FTF diagnosis from another dermatologist, blinded to the TD evaluation | instant evaluation of clinical images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | substantial diagnostic agreement on primary diagnosis and management with with AK and BCC being the third and fourth most common diagnoses. | technical difficulties, no TDS |
Giavina-Bianchi et al. [20] | Brazil | retrospective cohort study | 30,976 patients with 55,012 lesions | TD evaluation on skin cancer (10 most frequent skin neoplasms) vs. FTF evaluation or histopathology reports with focus on diagnostic accuracy | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | low to moderate diagnostic concordance (kappa −0:146 to 0:326) for NMSC and AK | no assessment of false negative cases |
Author(s) | Country | Study Design | Study Population (n) | Intervention/Study Arms | Assessment TD Method | Reference Standard | Outcome | Potential Limitations/Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zink et al. [21] | Germany | prospective pilot study | 26 patients | TD/TDS evaluation using a mobile phone camera and a vs. FTF diagnosis with dermoscopy | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | diagnostic concordance in 92:3% of the cases | histology available only in 23% of the cases, FTF was performed by residents, while TD evaluation by a senior consultant |
Veronese et al. [22] | Italy | retrospective observational study | 144 images of suspected skin cancer lesions | FTF diagnosis using a dermatoscope vs. TDS using a dermatoscope vs. TDS using a novel smart-phone image capture device vs. TDS using the former with the interposition of a slide | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | histopathology (malignant lesions) and FTF diagnosis incl. Conventional dermoscopy with follow-up (non-malignant lesions) | TDS using conventional dermatoscopy had substantial diagnostic concordance, higher than the other two methods | retrospective character of the study |
Paget et al. [23] | United Kingdom | retrospective cohort study | 400 cases | TD/TDS evaluation before and aftera weekly teledermatology intradisciplinary team meeting | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | not mentioned | increase of direct discharge rate and decrease of biopsy rate after implementation of the meeting, no change in requested FTF rate | retrospective character of the study |
Marwaha et al. [24] | United States | retrospective cohort study | 59,729 patients | several workflows of TD/TDS evaluation of skin cancer lesions vs. direct FTF referral | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | histopathology (malignant lesions) and FTF diagnosis (non-malignant lesions) | workflow of high-resolution images with TDS had 9% higher probability of cancer detection in comparison to FTF, reduction of FTF rate by 40%, reduced wait times | potential selections bias |
Bowns et al. [25] | United Kingdom | multicenter randomized control trial | 208 patients | TD/TDS evaluation of GP referrals vs. FTF diagnosis | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | modest diagnostic concordance (68%) between the two arms, sensitive but not specific | higher loss of control cases in comparison to intervention cases |
Ferrándiz et al. [26] | Spain | single-center double-blind randomized control trial | 454 patients | TD evaluation alone vs. TD plus TDS evaluation for suspected skin cancer, using images captured with a professional dermatoscope | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis after consulation | Diagnostic concordance with FTF increased by using TDS, increased confidence level to avoid FTF in benign lesions and was cost-effective | no data on histopathology of the lesions, regarding the reference standard |
Senel et al. [27] | Turkey | retrospective monocentric cohort study | 120 skin tumor lesions | TD evaluation of random benign and malignant tumors vs. TS/TDS evaluation 2 months later, conducted from the same two dermatologists vs. histopathology | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | histopathology | reliability was substantial with TD and almost perfect after TD/TDS, TDS increased diagnostic accuracy especially for SCC, BCC, actinic keratosis | TDS only with 30-fold magnification |
Cheung et al. [28] | Unitred Kingdom | pilot monocentric study | 76 primary care referrals of suspected skin cancer | TD evaluation vs. FTF diagnosis for single lesions suspected for skin cancer in non-hair bearing or genital sites | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | 68% of TD evaluation confident benign diagnoses were made, no FTF-assessment needed | limited size, high-rate of non-attendance for FTF diagnosis (unavailable follow-up data) |
Tan et al. [29] | New Zealand | retrospective monocentric cohort study | 200 patients with 491 lesions | TD/TDS evaluation of referrals in a dermatology clinic vs. FTF diagnosis | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | TD/TDS showed approximate 100% sensitivity and 90% specificity for NMSC, 74% of TD/TDS evaluations did not need FTF evaluation | recall bias due to using the same dermatologist for TDS and FTF evaluation |
Tan et al. [30] | New Zealand | retrospective study | 206 patients with 979 lesions | TD/TDS evaluation for different cancerous and precancerous lesions from 5 experienced dermatologists | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | agreed TD diagnosis by all dermatologists | interrater agreement for AK/SCC in situ was moderate, moderate to very good for BCC and poor for SCC | no comparison with histopathology, selected population of elderly Fitzpatrick II patients |
May et al. [31] | United Kingdom | prospective monocentric observational comparative study | 43 patients with SCC out of 451 new patients | TD evaluation of melanoma and SCC vs. conventional FTF diagnosis after referral via post/fax | SAF: clinical photos | (-) | 10-day decrease of waiting waiting time for SCC | sample size |
Sola Ortigosa et al. [32] | Spain | prospective single-center comparative study | 636 patients with 1000 keratotic skin lesions | TD±TDS evaluation vs. FTF evaluation of keratotic lesions after initial primary care assessment | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | Consensus of FTF diagnosis or histopathology (in case of disagreement) | TD: High diagnostic concordance for AK and field cancerization, further increased by TDS incl. diagnotic concordance on AK subtypes | Biopsies only for 22:5% of cases |
Saranath et al. [33] | United States | retrospective medical chart review | 1569 solid organ transplant recipients | TD evaluation vs. FTF evaluation of NMSC for this population during the pandemic | SAF: clinical photos | not mentioned | superior diagnostic accuracy of FTF approach than TD | gold standard not mentioned, results refer to a special population |
Van der Heijden [34] | The Netherlands | prospective comparative study | 76 patients | TD/TDS evaluation of lesions using images taken from GPs vs. FTF diagnosis | SAF: clinical photos and dermoscopy images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | The inter-observer reliability on diagnosis was 0:65 (substantial), the diagnostic concordance of TD/TDS with histopathology was 0:41–0:63 (moderate) and 0:90 for FTF-diagnosis | Over 1/3 of the images were reported to have bad quality |
Mahendran et al. [35] | United Kingdom | prospective monocentric cohort study | 163 patients | TD evaluation of suspected skin cancer GP referrals from a consultant or experienced resident vs. FTF-diagnosis from a consultant | SAF: clinical photos | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | 48% of the consultant’s diagnoses were identical with FTF diagnosis, less for the trainee | no statistical analysis of diagnostic agreement, recall bias possible |
Mehrtens et al. [36] | United Kingdom | retrospective chart review | 40,201 teleconsultations | TD evaluation of skin lesions vs. diagnosis as obtained from patient notes and histology records | SAF: clinical images and option for dermoscopic images | FTF diagnosis or histopathology if performed | 10% of TD did not provide any diagnosis, diagnostic concordance with biopsied samples was 68%, BCC, AK and SCC were third to fifth most common diagnosis | retrospective character of the study |
Hames et al. [37] | Australia | retrospective chart review | 20 volunteers | Automatic analysis of pictures frompatients with and without actinic keratosis based on color based transforms and erythema vs. FTF approach | analysis of clinical images | TD evaluation | Correlation between of automated analysis and TD evaluation was moderate | (-) |
Silveira et al. [38] | Brazil | monocentric retrospective study | 416 lesions | TD evaluation of suspected skin cancer lesions by two oncologistsand classification as malignant, benign, unknown and low quality image vs. FTF approach | SAF: clinical photos | histopathology | High diagnostic accuracy (>85%) in comparison to FTF, BCC and SCC were the most common tumors | no dermnoscopic images, medical history to accompany TD missing |
Escalé-Besa et al. [39] | Spain | prospective multicenter observational feasiblity study | 100 patients/44 patients with a skin disease | GP evaluation of skin lesions vs. TD evaluation of GP-acquired images via smartphone camera vs. evaluation through a machine learning model | SAF: clinical photos | histopathology or concentual FTF diagnosis | diagnostic accuracy was lower for the ML model concerning the primary diagnosis and higher for the TD evl | AK was considered a benign tumor |
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Nikolakis, G.; Vaiopoulos, A.G.; Georgopoulos, I.; Papakonstantinou, E.; Gaitanis, G.; Zouboulis, C.C. Insights, Advantages, and Barriers of Teledermatology vs. Face-to-Face Dermatology for the Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2024, 16, 578. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030578
Nikolakis G, Vaiopoulos AG, Georgopoulos I, Papakonstantinou E, Gaitanis G, Zouboulis CC. Insights, Advantages, and Barriers of Teledermatology vs. Face-to-Face Dermatology for the Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review. Cancers. 2024; 16(3):578. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030578
Chicago/Turabian StyleNikolakis, Georgios, Aristeidis G. Vaiopoulos, Ioannis Georgopoulos, Eleni Papakonstantinou, George Gaitanis, and Christos C. Zouboulis. 2024. "Insights, Advantages, and Barriers of Teledermatology vs. Face-to-Face Dermatology for the Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review" Cancers 16, no. 3: 578. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030578
APA StyleNikolakis, G., Vaiopoulos, A. G., Georgopoulos, I., Papakonstantinou, E., Gaitanis, G., & Zouboulis, C. C. (2024). Insights, Advantages, and Barriers of Teledermatology vs. Face-to-Face Dermatology for the Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review. Cancers, 16(3), 578. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16030578