# Impact of Diagnostic Confidence, Perceived Difficulty, and Clinical Experience in Facial Melanoma Detection: Results from a European Multicentric Teledermoscopic Study

**Authors:** Alessandra Cartocci, Alessio Luschi, Sofia Lo Conte, Elisa Cinotti, Francesca Farnetani, Aimilios Lallas, John Paoli, Caterina Longo, Elvira Moscarella, Danica Tiodorovic, Ignazio Stanganelli, Mariano Suppa, Emi Dika, Iris Zalaudek, Maria Antonietta Pizzichetta, Jean Luc Perrot, Imma Savarese, Magdalena Żychowska, Giovanni Rubegni, Mario Fruschelli, Ernesto Iadanza, Gabriele Cevenini, Linda Tognetti

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/cancers17203388 · 2025-10-21

## TL;DR

This study explores how confidence, difficulty perception, and experience affect the accuracy of diagnosing facial pigmented lesions, particularly melanoma.

## Contribution

The study reveals that diagnostic confidence and perceived difficulty influence management decisions more than experience in facial melanoma detection.

## Key findings

- Diagnostic confidence impacts accuracy in distinguishing benign and malignant facial pigmented lesions.
- Perceived difficulty influences management strategies, especially for benign cases.
- Higher experience reduces inappropriate biopsies and missed malignant cases.

## Abstract

The dermoscopic differential diagnosis of pigmented facial lesions poses a daily challenge, and lentigo maligna can be simulated by a series of beginning entities, especially small ones, such as pigmented actinic keratosis or solar lentigo. While it is known that personal dermoscopic skill largely relies on clinical experience, the level of diagnostic confidence and perceived difficulty of those cases have never been investigated. Here, we highlighted that diagnostic confidence has a certain impact on the diagnostic accuracy of benign and malignant difficult pigmented facial lesions, while perceived difficulty seems to influence management more. A higher personal experience in dermoscopy has a greater impact on management strategies and the recognition of easy cases than on the average diagnostic accuracy of aPFLs.

Background: Diagnosing facial melanoma, specifically lentigo maligna (LM) and lentigo maligna melanoma (LMM), is a daily clinical challenge, particularly for small or traumatized lesions. LM and LMM are part of the broader group of atypical pigmented facial lesions (aPFLs), which also includes benign look-alikes such as solar lentigo (SL), atypical nevi (AN), seborrheic keratosis (SK), and seborrheic-lichenoid keratosis (SLK), as well as pigmented actinic keratosis (PAK), a potentially premalignant keratinocytic lesion. Standard dermoscopy with handheld devices is the most widely used diagnostic tool in dermatology, but its accuracy heavily depends on the clinician’s experience and the perceived difficulty of the case. As a result, many benign aPFLs are excised for histological analysis, often leading to aesthetic concerns. Reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) can reduce the need for biopsies, but it is limited to specialized centers and requires skilled operators. Aims: This study aimed to assess the impact of personal skill, diagnostic confidence, and perceived difficulty on the diagnostic accuracy and management in the differential dermoscopic diagnosis of aPFLs. Methods: A total of 1197 aPFLs dermoscopic images were examined on a teledermoscopic web platform by 155 dermatologists and residents with 4 skill levels (<1, 1–4, 5–8, >8 years). They were asked to give a diagnosis, to estimate their confidence and rate the case, and choose a management strategy: “follow-up”, “RCM” or “biopsy”. Diagnostic accuracy was examined according to the personal skill level, confidence level, and rating in three settings: (I) all seven diagnoses, (II) LM vs. PAK vs. fully benign aPFLs, (III) malignant vs benign aPFLs. The same analyses were performed for management decisions. Results: The diagnostic confidence has a certain impact on the diagnostic accuracy, both in terms of multi-class diagnosis of six aPFLs in diagnostic (setting 1) and in benign vs malignant (setting 3) or benign vs. malignant/premalignant discrimination (setting 2). The perceived difficulty influences the management of benign lesions, with easy ratings predominantly matching with “follow-up” decision in benign cases, but not that of malignant lesions assigned to “biopsy”. The experience level had an impact on the perception of the number of real easy cases and had no to minimal impact on the average diagnostic accuracy of aPFLs. It, however, has an impact on the management strategy and specifically in terms of error reduction, namely the lowest rates of missed malignant cases after 8 years of experience and the lowest rates of inappropriate biopsies of benign lesions after 1 year of experience. Conclusions: The noninvasive diagnosis and management of aPFLs rest on a daily challenge. Highlighting which specific subgroups of lesions need attention and second-level examination (RCM) or biopsy can help detect early malignant cases, and, in parallel, reduce the rate of unnecessary removal of benign lesions.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** melanoma (MONDO:0005105), lentigo maligna melanoma (MONDO:0023619), seborrheic keratosis (MONDO:0008420)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** SL (MESH:D007911), LM (MESH:D018327), SK (MESH:D017492), aPFLs (MESH:D010859), Facial Melanoma (MESH:D008545), AN (MESH:D009506), keratinocytic lesion (MESH:C580062), PAK (MESH:D055623)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12563225/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12563225