Primary Care Physician Use of Elastic Scattering Spectroscopy on Skin Lesions Suggestive of Skin Cancer

Objectives: To evaluate the performance of noninvasive, elastic scattering spectroscopy, algorithm-powered device (DermaSensor) to detect melanoma and basal and squamous cell cancers in the primary care setting. Patients & Methods: DERM-SUCCESS, a blinded, prospective, multicenter pivotal study,...

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Main Authors: Stephen P. Merry, Ivana T. Croghan, Kimberly A. Dukes, Brian C. McCormick, Gerard T. Considine, Michelle J. Duvall, Curtis T. Thompson, David J. Leffell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319251344423
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Summary:Objectives: To evaluate the performance of noninvasive, elastic scattering spectroscopy, algorithm-powered device (DermaSensor) to detect melanoma and basal and squamous cell cancers in the primary care setting. Patients & Methods: DERM-SUCCESS, a blinded, prospective, multicenter pivotal study, enrolled adult patients between August 17, 2020, and December 9, 2021, with lesions that their primary care physicians (PCPs) suspected of skin cancer at clinics in the US (n = 18) and Australia (n = 4). These lesions were assessed by PCPs and scanned with the DermaSensor device. Biopsy specimens were collected, and histopathologic analysis was performed by dermatopathologists. The diagnostic performance of the device, dermatopathologist discordance, and subgroup analyses of clinical interest were calculated. Results: Of the 1579 skin lesions enrolled, dermatopathologic analysis identified 224 (14.2%) cancers. Device sensitivity was 95.5% (95% CI, 91.7%-97.6%) overall and 96.3% (92.9%-98.4%) for patients in the FDA-approved age group 40 years and older (90.2% for melanoma, 97.8% for basal cell carcinoma, and 97.7% for squamous cell carcinoma). Device specificity was 20.7%. The negative predictive value was 96.6%, and the positive predictive value was 16.6% (NNB 6). The device misclassified as “ monitor ” rather than “ investigate further ” 4 keratinocyte carcinomas and 4 melanomas in patients aged 40 years or older (n = 8, 0.5% of lesions, 3.7% of cancers biopsied). Conclusions: The DermaSensor device is an easy-to-use, point-of-care, hand-held skin cancer adjunctive diagnostic device with high sensitivity and NPV to help inform PCP decision-making about skin lesions suspicious for cancer that need further evaluation and those that may be monitored.
ISSN:2150-1327