TY - JOUR
T1 - Differences Between Patient and Clinician-Taken Images
T2 - Implications for Virtual Care of Skin Conditions
AU - Rikhye, Rajeev V.
AU - Hong, Grace Eunhae
AU - Singh, Preeti
AU - Smith, Margaret Ann
AU - Loh, Aaron
AU - Muralidharan, Vijaytha
AU - Wong, Doris
AU - Sayres, Rory
AU - Phung, Michelle
AU - Betancourt, Nicolas
AU - Fong, Bradley
AU - Sahasrabudhe, Rachna
AU - Nasim, Khoban
AU - Eschholz, Alec
AU - Matias, Yossi
AU - Corrado, Greg S.
AU - Chou, Katherine
AU - Webster, Dale R.
AU - Bui, Peggy
AU - Liu, Yuan
AU - Liu, Yun
AU - Ko, Justin
AU - Lin, Steven
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Objective: To understand and highlight the differences in clinical, demographic, and image quality characteristics between patient-taken (PAT) and clinic-taken (CLIN) photographs of skin conditions. Patients and Methods: This retrospective study applied logistic regression to data from 2500 deidentified cases in Stanford Health Care's eConsult system, from November 2015 to January 2021. Cases with undiagnosable or multiple conditions or cases with both patient and clinician image sources were excluded, leaving 628 PAT cases and 1719 CLIN cases. Demographic characteristic factors, such as age and sex were self-reported, whereas anatomic location, estimated skin type, clinical signs and symptoms, condition duration, and condition frequency were summarized from patient health records. Image quality variables such as blur, lighting issues and whether the image contained skin, hair, or nails were estimated through a deep learning model. Results: Factors that were positively associated with CLIN photographs, post-2020 were as follows: age 60 years or older, darker skin types (eFST V/VI), and presence of skin growths. By contrast, factors that were positively associated with PAT photographs include conditions appearing intermittently, cases with blurry photographs, photographs with substantial nonskin (or nail/hair) regions and cases with more than 3 photographs. Within the PAT cohort, older age was associated with blurry photographs. Conclusion: There are various demographic, clinical, and image quality characteristic differences between PAT and CLIN photographs of skin concerns. The demographic characteristic differences present important considerations for improving digital literacy or access, whereas the image quality differences point to the need for improved patient education and better image capture workflows, particularly among elderly patients.
AB - Objective: To understand and highlight the differences in clinical, demographic, and image quality characteristics between patient-taken (PAT) and clinic-taken (CLIN) photographs of skin conditions. Patients and Methods: This retrospective study applied logistic regression to data from 2500 deidentified cases in Stanford Health Care's eConsult system, from November 2015 to January 2021. Cases with undiagnosable or multiple conditions or cases with both patient and clinician image sources were excluded, leaving 628 PAT cases and 1719 CLIN cases. Demographic characteristic factors, such as age and sex were self-reported, whereas anatomic location, estimated skin type, clinical signs and symptoms, condition duration, and condition frequency were summarized from patient health records. Image quality variables such as blur, lighting issues and whether the image contained skin, hair, or nails were estimated through a deep learning model. Results: Factors that were positively associated with CLIN photographs, post-2020 were as follows: age 60 years or older, darker skin types (eFST V/VI), and presence of skin growths. By contrast, factors that were positively associated with PAT photographs include conditions appearing intermittently, cases with blurry photographs, photographs with substantial nonskin (or nail/hair) regions and cases with more than 3 photographs. Within the PAT cohort, older age was associated with blurry photographs. Conclusion: There are various demographic, clinical, and image quality characteristic differences between PAT and CLIN photographs of skin concerns. The demographic characteristic differences present important considerations for improving digital literacy or access, whereas the image quality differences point to the need for improved patient education and better image capture workflows, particularly among elderly patients.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85187452097&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.mcpdig.2024.01.005
DO - 10.1016/j.mcpdig.2024.01.005
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AN - SCOPUS:85187452097
SN - 2949-7612
VL - 2
SP - 107
EP - 118
JO - Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health
JF - Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health
IS - 1
ER -