Improving diagnostic accuracy for suspicious melanocytic skin lesions: New Australian melanoma clinical practice guidelines stress the importance of clinician/pathologist communication — Richard A Scolyer (2019) | RDL Network
Improving diagnostic accuracy for suspicious melanocytic skin lesions: New Australian melanoma clinical practice guidelines stress the importance of clinician/pathologist communication
Pertinent clinical information includes patient age, sex, tumour site, specimen orientation (if appropriate), history of the lesion, presence of any clinically or dermoscopically suspicious areas within the lesion (including apparent regression), access to any relevant clinical and/or dermoscopic photographs and prior pathology reports, melanoma history and risk factors, and history of concurrent or recent pregnancy. If the clinical features are not concordant with the pathology findings, the clinician and pathologist should discuss the case to identify the reason for incongruence.
Katy Bell, Zhuohan Wu, Farzaneh Boroumand, David E. Elder, Peter M. Ferguson, Richard A Scolyer, Blake O’Brien, Raymond L. Barnhill, Adewole S. Adamson, Alexander C.J. van Akkooi, Jon Emery, Lisa Parker, Donald E. Low, Cynthia Low, Elspeth Davies, Sherrie Liu, Sharon Lewis, Bella Spongberg-Ross, Brooke Nickel
Geoffrey M. Reed, Jared W. Keeley, Tahilia J. Rebello, Michael B. First, Oye Gureje, José Luís Ayuso‐Mateos, Shigenobu Kanba, Brigitte Khoury, Cary S. Kogan, В. Краснов, Mario Maj, Jair de Jesus Mari, Pratap Sharan, Dan Joseph Stein, Min Zhao, Tsuyoshi Akiyama, Howard Andrews, Elson Asevedo, Majda Cheour, Tecelli Domínguez‐Martínez, Joseph El‐Khoury, Andrea Fiorillo,
Arndt Vogel, Andrés Cervantes, Ian Chau, Bruno Daniele, Josep M. Llovet, Tim Meyer, Jean‐Charles Nault, Ulf P. Neumann, Jens Ricke, Bruno Sangro, Peter Schirmacher, Chris Verslype, Francis Zech, Dirk Arnold, Erika Martinelli
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.