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Pattern Analysis of Benign and Malignant Atypical Melanocytic Skin Lesions of Palms and Soles: Variations of Dermoscopic Features According to Anatomic Site and Personal Experience

Authors :
Tognetti, Linda
Cartocci, Alessandra
Moscarella, Elvira
Lallas, Aimilios
Dika, Emi
Fargnoli, Maria Maria Concetta M.C.
Longo, Caterina
Nazzaro, Gianluca
Paoli, John
Stanganelli, Ignazio
Magi, Serena
Lacarrubba, Francesco
Broganelli, Paolo
Perrot, Jean Luc Uc J.L.
Suppa, Mariano
Giuffrida, Roberta
Cinotti, Elisa
Sofia, Lo Conte
Cataldo, Gennaro
Cevenini, Gabriele
Rubegni, Pietro
Tognetti, Linda
Cartocci, Alessandra
Moscarella, Elvira
Lallas, Aimilios
Dika, Emi
Fargnoli, Maria Maria Concetta M.C.
Longo, Caterina
Nazzaro, Gianluca
Paoli, John
Stanganelli, Ignazio
Magi, Serena
Lacarrubba, Francesco
Broganelli, Paolo
Perrot, Jean Luc Uc J.L.
Suppa, Mariano
Giuffrida, Roberta
Cinotti, Elisa
Sofia, Lo Conte
Cataldo, Gennaro
Cevenini, Gabriele
Rubegni, Pietro
Source :
Life, 14 (6
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: The differential diagnosis of atypical melanocytic skin lesions localized on palms and soles represents a diagnostic challenge: indeed, this spectrum encompasses atypical nevi (AN) and early-stage melanomas (EN) displaying overlapping clinical and dermoscopic features. This often generates unnecessary excisions or delayed diagnosis. Investigations to date were mostly carried out in specific populations, focusing either on acrolentiginous melanomas or morphologically typical acquired nevi. Aims: To investigate the dermoscopic features of atypical melanocytic palmoplantar skin lesions (aMPPLs) as evaluated by variously skilled dermatologists and assess their concordance; to investigate the variations in dermoscopic appearance according to precise location on palms and soles; to detect the features with the strongest association with malignancy/benignity in each specific site. Methods: A dataset of 471 aMPPLs—excised in the suspect of malignancy—was collected from 10 European Centers, including a standardized dermoscopic picture (17×) and lesion/patient metadata. An anatomical classification into 17 subareas was considered, along with an anatomo-functional classification considering pressure/friction, (4 macroareas). A total of 156 participants (95 with less than 5 years of experience in dermoscopy and 61 with ≥than 5 years) from 17 countries performed a blinded tele-dermoscopic pattern analysis over 20 cases through a specifically realized web platform. Results: A total of 37,440 dermoscopic evaluations were obtained over 94 (20%) EM and 377 (80%) AN. The areas with the highest density of EM compared to AN were the heel (40.3% EM/aMPPLs) of the sole and the “fingers area” (33%EM/aMPPLs) of the palm, both characterized by intense/chronic traumatism/friction. Globally, the recognition rates of 12 dermoscopic patterns were non statistically different between 95 dermatology residents and 61 specialists: aMPPLs in the plantar arch appeared to be the most “diffi<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Life, 14 (6
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1452776862
Document Type :
Electronic Resource