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Dermoscopic and histopathologic diagnosis of equivocal melanocytic skin lesions : An interdisciplinary study on 107 cases

โœ Scribed by Gerardo Ferrara; Giuseppe Argenziano; H. Peter Soyer; Rosamaria Corona; Francesco Sera; Bruno Brunetti; Lorenzo Cerroni; Sergio Chimenti; Laila El Shabrawi-Caelen; Angela Ferrari; Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof; Steven Kaddu; Domenico Piccolo; Massimiliano Scalvenzi; Stefania Staibano; Ingrid H. Wolf; Gaetano De Rosa


Book ID
102103813
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
78 KB
Volume
95
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Background:

Dermoscopy (dermatoscopy, epiluminescence microscopy) is increasingly employed for the preoperative detection of cutaneous melanoma; dermoscopic features of pigmented skin lesions have been previously defined using histopathology as the key to the code. in a preliminary study on 10 cases evaluated by nine dermoscopists and nine histopathologists, the authors experienced that when at least two dermoscopists disagree in evaluating a melanocytic lesion, even histopathologic consultations may give equivocal results.

Methods:

One hundred seven melanocytic skin lesions, consecutively excised because of equivocal clinical and/or dermoscopic features, were retrospectively examined by eight dermoscopists and eight histopathologists; the diagnostic interobserver agreement was calculated by means of the schouten k statistics. after histopathologic consultations, all 107 lesions underwent unblinded dermoscopic re-evaluation in order to find which dermoscopic features had given rise to histopathologic diagnostic difficulties.

Results:

The interobserver ageement was good for both dermoscopy (k = 0.53) and histopathology (k = 0.74). out of 48 cases evaluated by the dermoscopists in complete accordance, only 8 (16.7%) received at least one conflicting histopathologic diagnosis. instead, among the remaining 59 cases with at least one disagreeing dermoscopic diagnosis, 21 (35.6%) received at least one disagreeing histopathologic diagnosis. the unblinded dermoscopic re-evaluation showed that five out of seven lesions with clear-cut regression structures were histopathologically controversial.

Conclusions:

At least for selected and reasonably difficult lesions, a diagnostic discrepancy among formally trained dermoscopists seems to be predictive for a diagnostic disagreement among histopathologists. lesions showing clear-cut regression structures are prone to give some histopathologic disagreement.


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