3.9 Article Proceedings Paper

The performance of SolarScan - An. automated dermoscopy image analysis instrument for the diagnosis of primary melanoma

Journal

ARCHIVES OF DERMATOLOGY
Volume 141, Issue 11, Pages 1388-1396

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/archderm.141.11.1388

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Objective: To describe the diagnostic performance of SolarScan (Polartechnics Ltd, Sydney, Australia), an automated instrument for the diagnosis of primary melanoma. Design: Images from a data set of 2430 lesions (382 were melanomas; median Breslow thickness, 0.36 mm) were divided into a training set and an independent test set at a ratio of approximately 2:1. A diagnostic algorithm (absolute diagnosis of melanoma vs benign lesion and estimated probability of melanoma) was developed and its performance described on the test set. High-quality clinical and dermoscopy images with a detailed patient history for 78 lesions (13 of which were melanomas) from the test set were given to various clinicians to compare, their diagnostic accuracy with that of SolarScan. Setting: Seven specialist referral centers and 2 general practice skin cancer clinics from 3 continents. Comparison between clinician diagnosis and SolarScan diagnosis was by 3 dermoscopy experts, 4 dermatologists, 3 trainee dermatologists, and 3 general practitioners. Patients: Images of the melanocytic lesions were obtained from patients who required either excision or digital monitoring to exclude malignancy, Main Outcome Measures: Sensitivity, specificity, the area under the receiver operator characteristic curve, median probability for the diagnosis of melanoma, a direct comparison of SolarScan with diagnoses performed by humans, and interinstrument and intrainstrument reproducibility. Results: The melanocytic-only diagnostic model was highly reproducible in the test set and gave a sensitivity of 91% (95% confidence interval [CI], 86%-96%) and specificity of 68% (95% Cl, 64%-72%) for melanoma. SolarScan had comparable or superior sensitivity and specificity (85% vs 65%) compared with those of experts (90% vs 59%), dermatologists (81% vs; 60%), trainees (85% vs 36%; P=.06), and general practitioners (62% vs 63%). The intraclass correlation coefficient of intrainstrument repeatability was 0.86 (95% Cl, 0.83-0.88), indicating an excellent repeatability. There was no significant interinstrument variation (P=.80). Conclusions: SolarScan is a robust diagnostic instrument for pigmented or partially pigmented melanocytic lesions of the skin. Preliminary data suggest that its performance is comparable or superior to that of a range of clinician groups-However, these findings should be confirmed in a formal clinical trial.

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