Patient-led skin cancer teledermatology without dermoscopy during the COVID-19 pandemic: important lessons for the development of future patient-facing teledermatology and artificial intelligence-assisted -self-diagnosis.
Omar M E AliBeth WrightCharlotte GoodheadPhilip J HamptonPublished in: Clinical and experimental dermatology (2024)
MySkinSelfie is a mobile phone application for skin self-monitoring, enabling secure sharing of patient-captured images with healthcare providers. This retrospective study assessed MySkinSelfie's role in remote skin cancer assessment at two centres for urgent (melanoma and squamous cell carcinoma) and nonurgent skin cancer referrals, investigating the feasibility of using patient-captured images without dermoscopy for remote diagnosis. The total number of lesions using MySkinSelfie was 814, with a mean patient age of 63 years. Remote consultations reduced face-to-face appointments by 90% for basal cell carcinoma and by 63% for referrals on a 2-week waiting list. Diagnostic concordance (consultant vs. histological diagnosis) rates of 72% and 83% were observed for basal cell carcinoma (n = 107) and urgent skin cancers (n = 704), respectively. Challenges included image quality, workflow integration and lack of dermoscopy. Higher sensitivities were observed in recent artificial intelligence algorithms employing dermoscopy. While patient-captured images proved useful during the COVID-19 pandemic, further research is needed to explore the feasibility of widespread patient-led dermoscopy to enable direct patient-to-artificial intelligence diagnostic assessment.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- skin cancer
- deep learning
- case report
- machine learning
- healthcare
- squamous cell carcinoma
- big data
- clinical trial
- convolutional neural network
- randomized controlled trial
- magnetic resonance imaging
- primary care
- radiation therapy
- image quality
- optical coherence tomography
- young adults
- health insurance
- affordable care act
- clinical evaluation
- childhood cancer