Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Genetic tests, clinical data sharpen pigmented lesion diagnosis


 

AT SDEF HAWAII DERMATOLOGY SEMINAR

References

WAIKOLOA, HAWAII – While many pigmented lesions analyzed in the dermatopathology lab are easily classifiable as benign or malignant, a certain percentage of cases are “very challenging to all examiners” – and in those cases, newer testing methods such as immunostaining or genetic testing can provide useful information, according to Dr. Whitney High.

Morphologic analysis of pigmented lesions under the microscope to determine whether a lesion is benign or malignant has limitations, said Dr. High, director of dermatopathology at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora. “We don’t really actually know. We haven’t genetically queried the cells.”

In a video interview at the Hawaii Dermatology Seminar, Dr. High emphasized, however, that no test is 100% sensitive and 100% specific. In fact, such tests should be considered adjunctive – requiring “some type of physician oversight or guidance to decide what is a significant result, what is an insignificant result, what is a confounded result, [and] what is a discrepant result.”

Clinical information is also useful, Dr. High said, noting that when this information is not provided, “I don’t really have any feeling from the clinician as to whether the lesion is new, growing, changing, [or] doing anything suspicious.”

The Hawaii Dermatology Seminar is provided by Global Academy for Medical Education/Skin Disease Education Foundation. SDEF and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. High had no disclosures.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

emechcatie@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Who among us has not asked a patient to keep track of a mole?
MDedge Dermatology
Books, text messages increase sun protection behaviors
MDedge Dermatology
High-dose interferon offered no survival benefit in patients with melanoma and a single tumor–positive sentinel lymph node
MDedge Dermatology
Young women who tan indoors are at two- to sixfold increased risk of melanoma
MDedge Dermatology
Average person with atopic dermatitis has no increased risk of actinic keratosis or nonmelanoma skin cancer
MDedge Dermatology
New tanning dependence screening tool ‘promising’
MDedge Dermatology
When the Doctor Is Not a Doctor
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: What’s new on atopic dermatitis drugs and cancer concerns?
MDedge Dermatology
Product News: 02 2016
MDedge Dermatology
VIDEO: New microscopy tools improve melanoma detection
MDedge Dermatology