远程皮肤镜诊断结果研究的挑战:对异质研究特征的范围审查。

Q3 Medicine JMIR dermatology Pub Date : 2024-10-18 DOI:10.2196/60346
Femke van Sinderen, Anne P Langermans, Andre W Kushniruk, Elizabeth M Borycki, Monique M Jaspers, Linda W Peute
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:远程皮肤镜已被证明可降低皮肤癌检测的成本并提高皮肤病治疗的可及性。然而,远程皮肤镜研究之间的异质性阻碍了系统综述对诊断结果的概括,妨碍了普通实践中对远程皮肤镜的信任和采用,限制了整体医疗保健效益:本研究旨在通过对导致异质性的研究特征进行识别和分类,提高对远程皮肤镜诊断研究的理解和标准化。随后,对这些特征的可变性和一致性进行了评估:方法:我们对有关远程皮肤镜检查诊断结果的系统综述进行了回顾,以找出导致异质性的已报道研究特征。这些特征按主题分为3个领域(人群、指标检测和参考标准),形成了一个数据提取框架。在PRISMA-ScR(系统性综述和荟萃分析的首选报告项目扩展范围综述)核对表的指导下,对远程皮肤镜诊断结果研究进行了范围综述。通过描述性内容分析法提取并分析了纳入研究中与研究特征相关的数据。系统综述的参考文献列表验证了范围界定综述的查询结果:文献检索共获得 4 篇系统综述,发现了 15 项涉及人群、指标测试和参考标准领域的不同研究。范围界定审查确定了 49 项研究,其中 27 项与系统综述重叠。研究人群的特征各不相同,三分之一(16/49,33%)的研究报告了少于 100 个样本;大多数研究(41/49,84%)报告了病变类型,大多数(20/49,41%)远程皮肤镜检查是在二级医疗机构进行的。五分之一的研究(11/49,22%)没有说明纳入或排除标准,或者标准差异很大。指标检测特征显示了临床专业知识、专业和皮肤镜摄影培训方面的差异,59%(29/49)没有报告一项或多项指标检测特征。图像质量和临床信息报告同样存在差异。参考标准特征涉及远程皮肤科医生的评估,但有 16 项研究未报告远程皮肤科医生的经验水平。大多数研究(26/49,53%)将组织病理学作为金标准:结论:远程皮肤镜诊断结果研究在人群、指标测试和参考标准领域的异质性强调了标准化报告的必要性。这阻碍了系统综述中对皮肤远程镜检查诊断结果的概括,并限制了将研究结果融入实践。建议采用(量身定制的)STARD(诊断准确性研究报告标准)核对表来进行远程皮肤镜诊断结果研究,以提高结果的一致性和可比性。我们建议开展德尔菲研究,就量身定制的 STARD 指南达成共识。
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Challenges in Teledermoscopy Diagnostic Outcome Studies: Scoping Review of Heterogeneous Study Characteristics.

Background: Teledermoscopy has demonstrated benefits such as decreased costs and enhanced access to dermatology care for skin cancer detection. However, the heterogeneity among teledermoscopy studies hinders the systematic reviews' synopsis of diagnostic outcomes, impeding trust and adoption in general practice and limiting overall health care benefits.

Objective: This study aims to improve understanding and standardization of teledermoscopy diagnostic studies, by identifying and categorizing study characteristics contributing to heterogeneity. Subsequently, the variability and consistency of these characteristics were assessed.

Methods: A review of systematic reviews regarding the diagnostic outcomes of teledermoscopy was performed to discern reported study characteristics contributing to heterogeneity. These characteristics were thematically grouped into 3 domains (population, index test, and reference standard), forming a data extraction framework. A scoping review on teledermoscopy diagnostic outcomes studies was performed, guided by the PRISMA-ScR (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews) checklist. Data pertaining to study characteristics from included studies were extracted and analyzed through descriptive content analysis. Systematic reviews' reference lists validated the scoping review query.

Results: The literature search yielded 4 systematic reviews, revealing 15 heterogeneous studies across the population, index test, and reference standard domains. The scoping review identified 49 studies, with 27 overlapping with the systematic reviews. Population characteristics varied, with one-third (16/49, 33%) of studies reporting fewer than 100 samples; most studies (41/49, 84%) reported on the type of lesion, and most (20/49, 41%) teledermoscopy consultations took place in secondary care. One-fifth (11/49, 22%) did not describe inclusion or exclusion criteria, or the criteria varied highly. Index test characteristics showed differences in clinical expertise, profession, and training in dermatoscopic photography, and 59% (29/49) did not report on 1 or more index test characteristics. Image quality and clinical information reporting likewise varied. Reference standard characteristics involved teledermatologists' assessment, but 16 studies did not report teledermatologists' experience levels. Most studies (26/49, 53%) used histopathology as a gold standard.

Conclusions: The heterogeneity in the population, index tests, and reference standard domains across teledermoscopy diagnostic outcome studies underscores the need for standardized reporting. This hinders the synopsis of teledermoscopy diagnostic outcomes in systematic reviews and limits the integration of research results into practice. Adopting a (tailored) STARD (Standards for Reporting Diagnostic Accuracy Studies) checklist for teledermoscopy diagnostic outcome studies is recommended to enhance the consistency and comparability of outcomes. We suggest performing a Delphi study to gather consensus on the tailored STARD guideline.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊最新文献
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