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A 35-Gene Expression Profile Test for use in Suspicious Pigmented Lesions Impacts Clinical Management Decisions of Dermatopathologists and Dermatologists

Authors :
Clare Johnson
Matthew S. Goldberg
Brooke Russell
Kelly Douglas
Robert L. Cook
Aaron S. Farberg
Christine Bailey
Kelli Ahmed
Olga Zolochevska
Source :
SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine. 4:523-533
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
National Society for Cutaneous Medicine, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose: Histopathological examination is sufficient for diagnosis of many melanocytic neoplasms, however, diagnostic discordance is common between dermatopathologists. A timely and confident diagnosis is optimal, especially in cases where both benign and malignant melanocytic neoplasms are considered in the differential diagnosis as treatment plans diverge significantly. A 35-gene expression profile (GEP) test that classifies melanocytic lesions into categories (benign, intermediate-risk and malignant), has reported accuracy metrics of 99.1% sensitivity, 94.3% specificity, 93.6% positive predictive value and 99.2% negative predictive value in a validation cohort of 503 samples. The clinical utility of the 35-GEP is described. Methods: Dermatopathologists (n=6) and dermatologists (n=14) were queried regarding diagnostic challenges and patient management strategies in 60 difficult-to-diagnose melanocytic neoplasms. Participants reviewed each lesion twice, once without the 35-GEP result and once with. Responses were evaluated for consistent trends in the utilization of the 35-GEP test result. Results: Dermatopathologists utilized the 35-GEP result to refine their diagnoses by increasing overall lesion diagnostic concordance and confidence, while reducing additional work up requests. Dermatologists utilized the 35-GEP result to gauge overall prognosis and case difficulty. Alterations in office visit frequency, biopsies, and referrals to specialists were also influenced by the 35-GEP result and treatment plan modifications also matched the appropriate directionality of the 35-GEP result. Conclusions: The diagnosis of challenging melanocytic neoplasms and subsequent clinical management decisions are influenced by 35-GEP results in a manner that agrees with the test result. The utility of the test provides the opportunity to improve patient care.

Details

ISSN :
25741624
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SKIN The Journal of Cutaneous Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d1a6342efc0487e0eaadabd30f153d9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.25251/skin.4.6.4