학술논문

Pathologists' agreement on treatment suggestions for melanocytic skin lesions
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 82(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Detection
screening and diagnosis
Attitude of Health Personnel
Humans
Melanoma
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Pathology
Clinical
Skin Neoplasms
invasive melanoma
melanocytic skin lesions
melanoma in situ
pathology
skin biopsies
treatment guidelines
Clinical Sciences
Dermatology & Venereal Diseases
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAlthough treatment guidelines exist for melanoma in situ and invasive melanoma, guidelines for other melanocytic skin lesions do not exist.ObjectiveTo examine pathologists' treatment suggestions for a broad spectrum of melanocytic skin lesions and compare them with existing guidelines.MethodsPathologists (N = 187) completed a survey and then provided diagnoses and treatment suggestions for 240 melanocytic skin lesions. Physician characteristics associated with treatment suggestions were evaluated with multivariable modeling.ResultsTreatment suggestions were concordant with National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines for the majority of cases interpreted as melanoma in situ (73%) and invasive melanoma (86%). Greater variability of treatment suggestions was seen for other lesion types without existing treatment guidelines. Characteristics associated with provision of treatment suggestions discordant with National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines were low caseloads (invasive melanoma), lack of fellowship training or board certification (melanoma in situ), and more than 10 years of experience (invasive melanoma and melanoma in situ).LimitationsPathologists could not perform immunohistochemical staining or other diagnostic tests; only 1 glass side was provided per biopsy case.ConclusionsPathologists' treatment suggestions vary significantly for melanocytic lesions, with lower variability for lesion types with national guidelines. Results suggest the need for standardization of treatment guidelines for all melanocytic lesion types.