Abstract

Teledermatology has been proving to be of great help for delivering healthcare, especially now, during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. It is crucial to assess how accurate this method can be for evaluating different dermatoses. Such knowledge can contribute to the dermatologists' decision of whether to adhere to teledermatology or not. Our objective was to determine the accuracy of teledermatology in the 10 most frequent skin neoplasms in our population, comparing telediagnosis to histopathological report and in-person dermatologists' diagnosis. A retrospective cohort study was conducted in São Paulo, Brazil, where a store-and-forward teledermatology project was implemented under primary-care attention to triage surgical, more complex, or severe dermatoses. A total of 30,976 patients presenting 55,012 lesions took part in the project. Thirteen teledermatologists who participated in the project had three options to refer the patients: send them directly to biopsy, to the in-person dermatologist, or back to the general physician with the most probable diagnosis and management. In the groups referred to the in-person dermatologist and biopsy, we looked for the 10 most frequent International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems-10 (ICD-10) of skin neoplasms, which resulted in 289 histopathologic reports and 803 in-person dermatologists' diagnosis. We were able to compare the ICD-10 codes filled by teledermatologists, in-person dermatologists, and from histopathological reports. The proportion of complete, partial, and no agreement rates between the in-person dermatologist's, histopathologic report, and the teledermatologist's diagnosis was assessed. We also calculated Cohen's kappa, for complete and complete plus partial agreement. The mean complete agreement rate comparing telediagnosis to histopathological report was 54% (157/289; kappa = 0.087), being the highest for malign lesions; to in-person dermatologists was 61% (487/803; kappa = 0.213), highest for benign lesions. When accuracy of telediagnosis for either malign or benign lesions was evaluated, the agreement rate with histopathology was 70% (kappa = 0.529) and with in-person dermatologist, 81% (kappa = 0.582). This study supports that teledermatology for skin neoplasms has moderate accuracy. This result reassures that it can be a proper option for patient care, especially when the goal is to differentiate benign from malign lesions.

Highlights

  • As we face this pandemic time around the world, telemedicine has been proving to be of great help for delivering healthcare

  • This was a retrospective cohort study designed to assess concordance between diagnoses made by in-person dermatologists and teledermatologists, and by histopathological reports and teledermatologists, approved by the Ethics Committee of Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein (CAAE: 97126618.6.0000.0071)

  • The female and male proportion was 72 and 28%, respectively, the female population accounts for 52.6% in the city of São Paulo (2010) [15]

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Summary

Introduction

As we face this pandemic time around the world, telemedicine has been proving to be of great help for delivering healthcare. Any medical specialty that is based on image analysis, such as dermatology, is especially suitable for this method of care. Asynchronous teledermatology is a method whereby clinical or dermoscopy dermatologic images are obtained and sent to the responding dermatologist who can review them at a later time. It provides high-resolution dermatologic images and promotes an efficient practice, this modality is limited by the ability of the teledermatologist to obtain additional clinical history while evaluating the case [1]. Its addition significantly improved the results of an internet-based skin cancer screening system, compared with clinical images alone [2]

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