The Substitution of Digital Images for Dermatologic Physical Examination
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Dermatology
- Vol. 133 (2) , 161-167
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archderm.1997.03890380031005
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the diagnostic accuracy of clinicians viewing a patient's history and static digital image set compared with clinicians who conducted officebased physical examinations of the same patients. Design: Observational study. Setting and Patients: One hundred sixteen adult patients presenting with dermatologic symptoms in a university-based practice who consented to have their skin conditions documented with a still digital camera according to a standardized protocol. Main Outcome Measures: Concordance between office-based dermatologists' diagnoses and 2 remote clinicians' diagnoses using still digital images (resolution, 92 dots per inch) and identical medical history data to render diagnoses. Results: When photographic quality was high and office-based clinician certainty was high, remote clinicians were in agreement more than 75% of the time. Office-based and remote clinicians were in agreement 61% to 64% of the time for all cases. No specific disease category appeared to be more or less amenable to diagnosis based on still digital imagery. The diagnostic certainty of the office-based clinician (reported from 0-10) had the most impact on agreement. When cases with office-based clinician certainty of no more than 7 were compared with cases with certainty of at least 9, agreement increased 54% for remote clinician 1 and 111% for remote clinician 2. As an isolated variable, photographic quality had a modest impact on agreement. Conclusions: Still digital images can substitute for the dermatologic physical examination in up to 83% of cases. This study provides validation of the store-and-forward concept of telemedicine as applied to dermatology. These results serve as the foundation for field testing of the concept in primary care settings. Arch Dermatol. 1997;133:161-167Keywords
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