Acta Dermato-Venereologica (Aug 2017)

Seven Non-melanoma Features to Rule Out Facial Melanoma

  • Philipp Tschandl,
  • Alessio Gambardella,
  • Amélie Boespflug,
  • Teresa Deinlein,
  • Vincenzo de Giorgi,
  • Harald Kittler,
  • Aimilios Lallas,
  • Josep Malvehy,
  • Elvira Moscarella,
  • Susana Puig,
  • Massimiliano Scalvenzi,
  • Luc Thomas,
  • Iris Zalaudek,
  • Roberto Alfano,
  • Giuseppe Argenziano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-2759
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 97, no. 10
pp. 1219 – 1224

Abstract

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Facial melanoma is difficult to diagnose and dermatoscopic features are often subtle. Dermatoscopic non-melanoma patterns may have a comparable diagnostic value. In this pilot study, facial lesions were collected retrospectively, resulting in a case set of 339 melanomas and 308 non-melanomas. Lesions were evaluated for the prevalence (> 50% of lesional surface) of 7 dermatoscopic non-melanoma features: scales, white follicles, erythema/reticular vessels, reticular and/or curved lines/fingerprints, structureless brown colour, sharp demarcation, and classic criteria of seborrhoeic keratosis. Melanomas had a lower number of non-melanoma patterns (p < 0.001). Scoring a lesion suspicious when no prevalent non-melanoma pattern is found resulted in a sensitivity of 88.5% and a specificity of 66.9% for the diagnosis of melanoma. Specificity was higher for solar lentigo (78.8%) and seborrhoeic keratosis (74.3%) and lower for actinic keratosis (61.4%) and lichenoid keratosis (25.6%). Evaluation of prevalent non-melanoma patterns can provide slightly lower sensitivity and higher specificity in detecting facial melanoma compared with already known malignant features.

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