Keywords

audit, teledermatology, skin cancer, triage, telemedicine

 

Authors

  1. Cheung, Chung-mei Maggie
  2. Muttardi, Kayria
  3. Chinthapalli, Suchitra
  4. Ismail, Ferina

ABSTRACT

Background: Efficient clinical pathways are needed to meet the growing pressures in dermatology due to the significant rise in the number of suspected skin cancer referrals. Our hospital serves a wide geographical area and receives a large number of 2-week-wait (2WW) suspected skin cancer referrals. In the United Kingdom, approximately 10-12% of 2WW referrals are diagnosed as skin cancers fulfilling the 2WW criteria.

 

Purpose: We sought to assess the role of teledermatology in reducing hospital consultations for patients referred via the dermatology 2WW pathway.

 

Methods: We piloted a teledermatology service and detailed the clinical outcomes of patients with solitary skin lesions of uncertain diagnosis triaged through this pathway. Seventy-six primary care referrals were reviewed by consultant dermatologists and analyzed against the British Association of Dermatologists' teledermatology audit standards.

 

Results: In 52/76 (68%) of patients, confident benign diagnoses were made, avoiding the need for a face-to-face (FTF) consultation.

 

Conclusions: Our results showed that with adequate image quality, teledermatology can be used to accurately diagnose skin lesions.

 

Implications: Teledermatology can significantly reduce the number of urgent referrals necessitating FTF appointments, therefore providing a new solution to streamline care delivery.