Swetter Susan M, Chang Julia, Shaub Amanda R, Weinstock Martin A, Lewis Eleanor T, Asch Steven M
Dermatology Service, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, California.
Department of Dermatology, Pigmented Lesion and Melanoma Program, Stanford University Medical Center and Cancer Institute, Stanford, California.
JAMA Dermatol. 2017 Aug 1;153(8):797-801. doi: 10.1001/jamadermatol.2017.1324.
Skin cancer screening may improve melanoma outcomes and keratinocyte carcinoma morbidity, but little is known about the feasibility of skin cancer training and clinical skin examination (CSE) by primary care practitioners (PCPs) in large health care systems.
To assess the association of skin cancer training and screening by PCPs with dermatology referral patterns and rates of skin biopsies.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this pilot interventional study performed at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, patients 35 years or older scheduled for an annual health habits screen in the PCP general medicine clinics were studied.
Six PCPs underwent Internet Curriculum for Melanoma Early Detection (INFORMED) training in May 2015, and 5 screened patients during the following 14 months.
Proportion of dermatology referrals, subsequent skin biopsies, and PCP diagnostic accuracy for skin cancer or precancer compared with dermatologist diagnosis were assessed in screened patients 14 months before the intervention (February 18, 2014, through April 30, 2015) and after the intervention (June 18, 2015, through August 30, 2016).
Among 258 patients offered screening (median age, 70 years; age range, 35-94 years; 255 [98.8%] male), 189 (73.3%) received CSE and 69 (26.7%) declined. A total of 62 of 189 patients (32.8%) were referred to a dermatologist after intervention: 33 (53.2%) for presumptive skin cancers and 15 (24.2%) for precancers. Nine of 50 patients (18.0%) evaluated in dermatology clinic underwent biopsy to exclude skin cancer. Correct diagnoses were made by PCPs in 13 of 38 patients (34.2%; 4 of 27 patients [14.8%] diagnosed with skin cancers and 5 of 11 patients [45.5%] diagnosed with actinic keratoses). Comparison of all outpatient visits for the 5 main participating PCPs before vs after intervention revealed no significant differences in dermatology referrals overall and those for presumptive skin cancer or actinic keratoses, skin biopsies, or PCP diagnostic accuracy with the exception of significantly fewer postintervention dermatology referrals that lacked specific diagnoses (25 [1.0%] vs 10 [0.4%], P = .01).
This pilot study suggests that PCP-based skin cancer training and screening are feasible and have the potential to improve PCP diagnostic accuracy without increasing specialty referrals or skin biopsies. Additional studies comparing screening rates, specialty referrals, and patient outcomes in trained vs untrained PCPs are needed before screening is widely implemented in large health care systems in the United States.
皮肤癌筛查可能改善黑色素瘤的治疗效果和角质形成细胞癌的发病率,但对于大型医疗保健系统中初级保健医生(PCP)进行皮肤癌培训和临床皮肤检查(CSE)的可行性知之甚少。
评估PCP进行的皮肤癌培训和筛查与皮肤科转诊模式及皮肤活检率之间的关联。
设计、设置和参与者:在退伍军人事务部帕洛阿尔托医疗保健系统进行的这项试点干预研究中,对在PCP普通内科诊所预约进行年度健康习惯筛查的35岁及以上患者进行了研究。
6名PCP于2015年5月接受了黑色素瘤早期检测网络课程(INFORMED)培训,其中5名在接下来的14个月内对患者进行了筛查。
在干预前(2014年2月18日至2015年4月30日)和干预后(2015年6月18日至2016年8月30日)对接受筛查的患者评估皮肤科转诊比例以及后续皮肤活检情况,并将PCP对皮肤癌或癌前病变的诊断准确性与皮肤科医生的诊断进行比较。
在258名接受筛查的患者中(中位年龄70岁;年龄范围35 - 94岁;255名[98.8%]为男性),189名(73.3%)接受了CSE,69名(26.7%)拒绝。干预后,189名患者中有62名(32.8%)被转诊至皮肤科:33名(53.2%)疑似皮肤癌,15名(24.2%)疑似癌前病变。在皮肤科诊所接受评估的50名患者中有9名(18.0%)接受了活检以排除皮肤癌。PCP对38名患者中的13名(34.