Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Difficult to diagnose melanomas


Melanomas That Failed Dermoscopic Detection: A Combined Clinicodermoscopic Approach for Not Missing Melanoma
Authors: PUIG, SUSANA1; ARGENZIANO, GIUSEPPE2; ZALAUDEK, IRIS; FERRARA, GERARDO3; PALOU, JOSE2; MASSI, DANIELA4; HOFMANN-WELLENHOF, RAINER5; SOYER, H. PETER5; MALVEHY, JOSEP1

Source: Dermatologic Surgery, Volume 33, Number 10, October 2007 , pp. 1262-1273(12)

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE

The objective was to describe the clinical and dermoscopic characteristics of difficult-to-diagnose melanomas (DDM). DESIGN

This study was a retrospective analysis of clinical data and dermoscopic images in a series of excised melanomas. SETTING

Cases were obtained from the database registers of three public hospitals in Barcelona (Spain), Naples (Italy), and Graz (Austria). PATIENTS

A total of 97 tumors with a main preoperative diagnosis different from melanoma and without sufficient criteria to be diagnosed clinically and dermoscopically as melanoma were studied. We studied clinical data from the patients and lesions, mean reason for excision, and consensus dermoscopic description of the lesions according to pattern analysis performed by a panel of four dermoscopists to obtain clues that allow these melanomas to be recognized. RESULTS

Ninety-three DDMs were evaluated. Three main dermoscopic categories of DDM have been identified: (1) DDMs lacking specific features (16/97), (2) DDMs simulating nonmelanocytic lesions (14/93), and (3) DDMs simulating benign melanocytic proliferations (67/93). The reasons for excision were (1) the subjective history of change referred by the patient (38% of cases), (2) the presence of clinical and/or dermoscopic “hints” for biopsy (33% of cases), and (3) the objective evidence of changes detected by digital dermoscopic follow-up (29% of cases). CONCLUSIONS
A diagnostic algorithm is proposed not to miss melanoma.

1 comment:

Dr Alan Cameron said...

I will have to wait for the dead tree version of this to arrive. I suppose it is helpful to have some sort of quantification of what kind of errors are made when melanomas are left behind, but I would hope for a more enlightening conclusion than "be very careful and cut lots of stuff out". Time will tell