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Ex Vivo Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy in Rare Skin Diseases.

Authors :
Messner, Luis
Deußing, Maximilian
Maurer, Michaela
Buttgereit, Lisa
Stärr, Lara
French, Lars E.
Hartmann, Daniela
Source :
Cancers. May2024, Vol. 16 Issue 9, p1713. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: This study investigated a new imaging technique called ex vivo confocal microscopy to examine rare skin conditions. By analyzing tissue samples from different skin disorders, we found that this technique could accurately identify unique microscopic features of both common and rare skin diseases. Importantly, examiners with more experience in interpreting these images achieved higher accuracy in diagnosis. This suggests that ex vivo confocal microscopy has the potential to be a valuable tool alongside traditional methods for diagnosing rare skin conditions early and accurately, leading to better treatment outcomes for patients. While ex vivo confocal laser scanning microscopy has previously demonstrated its utility in most common skin diseases, its use in the assessment of dermatological entities with lower incidence remains unexplored in most cases. We therefore aimed to evaluate the diagnostic efficacy of some rare skin tumors as well as a few inflammatory skin diseases, that have not yet been studied in ex vivo confocal laser scanning microscopy. A total of 50 tissue samples comprising 10 healthy controls, 10 basal cell carcinoma, 10 squamous cell carcinoma, and 20 rare skin conditions were imaged using the newest generation ex vivo confocal microscopy (Vivascope 2500 M-G4, Vivascope GmbH, Munich, Germany). Three blinded investigators were asked to identify characteristic features of rare skin disorders and distinguish them from more common skin diseases in the ex vivo confocal microscopy images. Our findings present the capability of ex vivo confocal microscopy to display distinctive morphologic patterns in common and rare skin diseases. As might be expected, we found a strong correlation between imaging experience and diagnostic accuracy. While the imaging inexperienced dermatohistopathologist reached 60% concordance, the imaging-trained dermatologist obtained 88% agreement with dermatohistopathology. The imaging-trained dermatohistopathologist achieved concordance up to 92% with gold-standard dermatohistopathology. This study highlights the potential of ex vivo confocal laser scanning microscopy as a promising adjunct to conventional dermatohistopathology for the early and precise identification of rare dermatological disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177182590
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091713