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. 2018 Dec 4;2018(12):CD011902. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011902.pub2

Rubegni 2016.

Study characteristics
Patient sampling Study design: case series
Data collection: retrospective image selection/prospective interpretation
Period of data collection: 2010–2014
Country: NR. Majority of study authors based in Italy, but source of lesion images not described
Patient characteristics and setting Inclusion criteria: consecutive melanocytic skin lesions showing clear‐cut dermoscopic features of regression that were excised for suspected malignancy. Regression features included: blue‐grey veil, blue grey globules and white scar‐like areas, hypopigmented areas and atypical network (all of which may be present in benign and malignant lesions)
Setting: secondary; not clearly reported but study authors all based in dermatology units or departments
Prior testing: dermatoscopic suspicion in all cases
Setting for prior testing: NR
Exclusion criteria: none reported
Sample size (participants): number included: 95
Sample size (lesions): number included: 95
Participant characteristics: median age: naevi group 36 years (14‐59 years); melanoma group 54.4 years (17‐89 years). Male: 43; 45.2%
Lesion characteristics: lesion site: head/neck: 20 (40%) of naevi; trunk 23(46%) of naevi and 24 (55%) of melanoma group; extremities 7 (14%) of naevi group; other areas 20 (45%) of melanomas. Lesion size: mean 7.63 mm, range 4‐16 mm (naevi) and 10.33 mm 5‐19 mm (melanomas)
Index tests Dermoscopy: pattern analysis using 12 dermoscopic features of regression (study also developed a new classifier but data excluded from review, due to use of 'leave one out' procedure for validation)
Method of diagnosis: dermoscopic images; randomly presented to observers blinded to histopathological diagnosis
Prior test data: unclear; data on morphology, site, age and gender were collected but not clear if presented along with image
Diagnostic threshold: diagnosis of melanoma or naevus following assessment of 12 dermoscopic structures suggestive of regression selected according to the literature (Zalaudek 2004; Seidenari 2010) including blue‐grey areas, blue‐whitish veil, blue globules and blue‐grey peppering, white scar‐like areas, white shiny streaks, atypical network, hypopigmented areas, irregular dots and globules, irregular streaks, irregular pigmented blotches and pink areas
Diagnosis based on: single observer and consensus of 2/3 (n = 3)
Observer qualifications: dermatologist
Experience in practice: high; expert dermatologists
Experience with dermoscopy: high; "experienced dermoscopists"
Target condition and reference standard(s) Reference standard: histological diagnosis alone
Details: every histological diagnosis was confirmed by 2/3 expert dermopathologists
 Disease‐positive: 45; disease‐negative: 50
Target condition (final diagnoses) 
 Melanoma (in situ and invasive, or NR): 45
Benign naevus: 50
Flow and timing Participant exclusions: none reported
Index test to reference standard interval: not described
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? No    
Did the study avoid including participants with multiple lesions? Yes    
    Low High
DOMAIN 2: Index Test Dermoscopy ‐ image‐based
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? No    
Were thresholds or criteria for diagnosis reported in sufficient detail to allow replication? Yes    
Was the test interpretation carried out by an experienced examiner? Yes    
    Low High
DOMAIN 3: Reference Standard
Is the reference standards likely to correctly classify the target condition? Yes    
Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index tests? Unclear    
Expert opinion (with no histological confirmation) was not used as a reference standard Yes    
Was histology interpretation carried out by an experienced histopathologist or by a dermatopathologist? Yes    
    Low Low
DOMAIN 4: Flow and Timing
Was there an appropriate interval between index test and reference standard? Unclear    
Did all patients receive the same reference standard? Yes    
Were all patients included in the analysis? Yes    
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?      
If more than one algorithm was evaluated for the same test, was the interval between application of the different algorithms 1 month or less?      
    Unclear