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The aim of this project is to assess whether a specific smartphone application (Skinvision App®) can be used as a tool to preselect skin lesions suspicious for skin cancer that require urgent medical advice.
Full description
Skin cancer is the most frequent cancer diagnosed and its incidence will keep on rising in the next decade. Early detection and treatment are key to improve both morbidity and mortality, and to decrease the cost to society. Persons at risk of developing skin cancer may be subjected to regular checkups. However a considerable number of skin cancers develop in the low-risk general population. Since systematic screening in the general population is not cost-effective, smartphone applications that use inbuilt algorithms are of increasing interest and claim to assist in making a risk assessment in case of concerning skin lesions.
Based on previous research, a so-called triage consultation was installed at the policlinic of Ghent University Hospital for patients with 1 to 2 lesions of concern: changing mole, ugly duckling, new mole in adult, rapidly growing lesion or non-healing lesion. Skin cancer detection rate in this setting was at least 13% with 4% melanoma. This is 6 to 8-fold higher than reported by conventional skin cancer screening programs (PMID: 26466155; PMID: 33480073). The reason for this is that a preselection of lesions meeting specific criteria is done. This lesion-directed screening may be a way to make skin cancer screening in the general population (more) cost-effective.
In this study we will investigate whether the Skinvision app can function as a preselection tool for lesions for which urgent medical advice is needed. Although this app is CE marked and is already promoted to the public, it's performance and value in daily practice have been insufficiently studied and there is a need for independent research.
The 4 main objectives of this study will be:
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with one or two lesions meeting at least one of the following criteria:
Written informed consent of the patient
Exclusion criteria
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Central trial contact
Amber Shen, MHP; Julie Kips, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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