Walter 2012.
Study characteristics | |||
Patient sampling |
Study design: RCT (control group only included) Data collection: prospective Period of data collection: March 2008‐May 2010 Country: UK |
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Patient characteristics and setting |
Inclusion criteria: adults with any suspicious PSL, i.e. any lesion presented by a patient, or opportunistically seen by a family doctor or practice nurse, that could not immediately be diagnosed as benign and about which the patient could not be reassured. Setting: primary. 15 general practices in eastern England Prior testing: clinical suspicion of malignancy without dermatoscopic suspicion Setting for prior testing: primary Exclusion criteria: those unable to give informed consent or considered inappropriate to include by their family doctor Sample size (participants): number eligible: 1297; number included: 1293 Sample size (lesions): number eligible: 1580; number included: 1583 Participant characteristics: mean age: 44.6 years (SD 16.8). Male: 465 (36%). Ethnicity: white 1214 (93.9%); mixed 45 (3.5%); missing: 34 (2.6%) Lesion characteristics: lesion thickness ≤ 1 mm: in 'more than half' of MM |
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Index tests |
VI: Glasgow/MacKie revised 7‐point checklist (MacKie 1990) Method of diagnosis: in‐person diagnosis Prior test data: N/A Diagnostic threshold: NR Diagnosis based on: single observer (n = 30) Observer qualifications: 28 GPs and 2 nurse practitioners recruited as 'lead clinicians' (2 per practice); appears as though they conducted all skin examinations. Excluded GPs with known dermatological expertise, e.g. current hospital practitioners, clinical assistants in dermatology, and GPs with a special interest in dermatology Experience in practice: mixed GP experience, median of 15 years' experience (range 4‐27 years); assumed low experience with PSLs. 7 had undergone some training in dermatology: 3 had a short dermatology training post, 3 were on clinical attachment to an out‐patient clinic, and 1 was unspecified |
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Target condition and reference standard(s) |
Reference standard: histological diagnosis plus follow‐up and expert opinion Histology (not further described) 215 (histology result missing in further 4) Disease positive: 35; disease negative: 180 Clinical follow‐up plus histology of suspicious lesions: 22 of the 411 referred patients were monitored (not further described); 566 of the 1162 not referred underwent expert review and were then re‐assessed at 3‐6 months Disease positive: 1; disease negative: 588 Expert opinion. Reviewed by 2 dermatology experts using the recorded clinical history and examination, a digital photograph, and MoleMate image where available Disease positive: 0; disease negative: 725 Target condition (final diagnoses) Melanoma (invasive): 30; melanoma (in situ): 6; BCC: 10 'Benign' diagnoses: 1306 |
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Flow and timing |
Excluded participants: 417 withdrew from control group after randomisation. 10 did not attend for dermatology assessment; 19 excluded; 1 died; 4 missing histology (in referred group; included as benign?); plus 12 with unknown outcome (in non‐referred group, assumed benign and included) Time interval to reference test: suspicious lesions referred under 2‐week wait system |
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Comparative | |||
Notes | ‐ | ||
Methodological quality | |||
Item | Authors' judgement | Risk of bias | Applicability concerns |
DOMAIN 1: Patient Selection | |||
Was a consecutive or random sample of patients enrolled? | Yes | ||
Was a case‐control design avoided? | Yes | ||
Did the study avoid inappropriate exclusions? | Yes | ||
Are the included patients and chosen study setting appropriate? | Yes | ||
Did the study avoid including participants with multiple lesions? | No | ||
Low | High | ||
DOMAIN 2: Index Test Visual Inspection ‐ in‐person | |||
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? | Yes | ||
If a threshold was used, was it pre‐specified? | Yes | ||
For studies reporting the accuracy of multiple diagnostic thresholds, was each threshold or algorithm interpreted without knowledge of the results of the others? | |||
Was the test applied and interpreted in a clinically applicable manner? | Yes | ||
Were thresholds or criteria for diagnosis reported in sufficient detail to allow replication? | Yes | ||
Was the test interpretation carried out by an experienced examiner? | No | ||
Low | High | ||
DOMAIN 3: Reference Standard | |||
Is the reference standards likely to correctly classify the target condition? | No | ||
Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index tests? | No | ||
Expert opinion (with no histological confirmation) was not used as a reference standard | No | ||
Was histology interpretation carried out by an experienced histopathologist or by a dermatopathologist? | Unclear | ||
High | High | ||
DOMAIN 4: Flow and Timing | |||
Was there an appropriate interval between index test and reference standard? | Yes | ||
Did all patients receive the same reference standard? | No | ||
Were all patients included in the analysis? | No | ||
If the reference standard includes clinical follow‐up of borderline/benign appearing lesions, was there a minimum follow‐up following application of index test(s) of at least: 3 months for melanoma or cSCC or 6 months for BCC? | Yes | ||
If more than one algorithm was evaluated for the same test, was the interval between application of the different algorithms 1 month or less? | |||
High |