@article{5491, author = {Joel A. Wolf and Jacqueline F. Moreau and Oleg Akilov and Timothy Patton and Joseph C. English and Jonhan Ho and Laura K. Ferris}, title = {Diagnostic inaccuracy of smartphone applications for melanoma detection.}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: To measure the performance of smartphone applications that evaluate photographs of skin lesions and provide the user with feedback about the likelihood of malignancy.

DESIGN: Case-control diagnostic accuracy study.

SETTING: Academic dermatology department. PARTICIPANTS AND MATERIALS: Digital clinical images of pigmented cutaneous lesions (60 melanoma and 128 benign control lesions) with a histologic diagnosis rendered by a board-certified dermatopathologist, obtained before biopsy from patients undergoing lesion removal as a part of routine care.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of 4 smartphone applications designed to aid nonclinician users in determining whether their skin lesion is benign or malignant.

RESULTS: Sensitivity of the 4 tested applications ranged from 6.8% to 98.1%; specificity, 30.4% to 93.7%; positive predictive value, 33.3% to 42.1%; and negative predictive value, 65.4% to 97.0%. The highest sensitivity for melanoma diagnosis was observed for an application that sends the image directly to a board-certified dermatologist for analysis; the lowest, for applications that use automated algorithms to analyze images.

CONCLUSIONS: The performance of smartphone applications in assessing melanoma risk is highly variable, and 3 of 4 smartphone applications incorrectly classified 30% or more of melanomas as unconcerning. Reliance on these applications, which are not subject to regulatory oversight, in lieu of medical consultation can delay the diagnosis of melanoma and harm users.

}, year = {2013}, journal = {JAMA Dermatol}, volume = {149}, pages = {422-426}, month = {04/2013}, issn = {2168-6084}, doi = {10.1001/jamadermatol.2013.2382}, language = {eng}, }