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The Usefulness of Dermoscopy for the Recognition of Malignant Collision Tumors.

Authors :
Zaballos, Pedro
Álvarez Salafranca, Marcial
Medina, Carolina
Bañuls, José
Puig, Susana
del Pozo, Luis Javier
Malvehy, Josep
Karaarslan, Isil K.
Thomas, Luc
Landi, Christian
Argenziano, Giuseppe
Llambrich, Àlex
Vera, Ángel
Gomez-Martín, Ignacio
Moscarella, Elvira
Aviles, José Antonio
Martin, Jose María
Pizarro, Ángel
Flores, Gemma
Source :
Dermatology (10188665); Jan2022, Vol. 238 Issue 1, p132-139, 8p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Preoperative diagnosis of malignant collision tumors (MCT) is extremely difficult. The value of dermoscopy to improve the correct detection of these tumors has not been previously studied. This study aims to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of MCT with and without dermoscopy and to describe the dermoscopic features of a large series of MCT. Methods: Dermoscopic images of 161 MCT were evaluated. Clinical and dermoscopic images of histopathologically proven MCT intermingled with other tumors were randomly presented to clinicians with different levels of experience, blinded to the diagnosis and objective of the study. The clinical and dermoscopic diagnostic accuracies were measured separately. Results: A total of 161 histopathologically proven cases of MCT were collected. The most frequent MCT was basal cell carcinoma-seborrheic keratosis collision tumor (CT; 37.9%), followed by basal cell carcinoma-melanocytic nevus CT (19.9%), and melanoma-seborrheic keratosis CT (6.8%). Diagnostic accuracy among experts on dermoscopy was 71.4%. The study included 119 participants. The percentage of correct diagnoses was 8% by naked eye examination and 36.4% by dermoscopy (p < 0.001). The presence of the malignant component in the cases of MCT was not recognizable in 19.1% of cases by naked eye examination and in 11.8% of cases by dermoscopy (p < 0.001). Conclusions: The diagnosis of MCT can be assisted and clarified by dermoscopy. However, many of these lesions manifest complex morphologies and continue to be challenging, even for experts on dermoscopy. Atypical, uncertain, or non-classifiable lesions still need a complete excision for the final diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10188665
Volume :
238
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Dermatology (10188665)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154661025
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000514583