Genetic Epidemiology, Translational Neurogenomics, Psychiatric Genetics and Statistical Genetics Laboratories investigate the pattern of disease in families, particularly identical and non-identical twins, to assess the relative importance of genes and environment in a variety of important health problems.
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PMID
8674000
TITLE
Reliability of computer image analysis of pigmented skin lesions of Australian adolescents.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND NlmCategory: BACKGROUND
The diagnosis of melanomas at an early stage is associated with improved survival, so the recognition of changes in pigmented skin lesions over time is important. We have developed a computer imaging system with the aim of assisting clinicians in differentiating early melanomas from benign pigmented skin lesions. The objective of this study was to investigate the system's reliability over time in measuring diagnostic characteristics of pigmented skin lesions, including their color, size, shape, and distinctness of boundary.
METHODS NlmCategory: METHODS
We captured video images of 5 lesions, all larger than 2 mm in greatest dimension, on each of 66 Australian adolescents on 2 occasions approximately 1 month apart. Features extracted by computer image analysis included area, perimeter, and regularity of outline of the lesions, the mean and standard deviation of reflectance at red, green, and blue wavelengths, and the mean and standard deviation of the gradients of red, green, and blue reflectance at the lesion boundary.
RESULTS NlmCategory: RESULTS
All measurements showed moderate to high reliability (intraclass correlation coefficients 0.66-0.94), except for the standard deviations of the color gradients, whose reliability improved to moderate levels (0.68-0.71) when the mean of 5 lesions was considered. For most outcomes, reasonable within subject reliability was achieved when five lesions per subject were measured.
CONCLUSIONS NlmCategory: CONCLUSIONS
These results, in combination with previous work demonstrating the reasonable ability of this computer imaging system to discriminate between malignant melanomas and other pigmented lesions, indicates that the system has the potential to become a useful tool for clinicians in following people with pigmented lesions over time to detect early malignant changes.
DATE PUBLISHED
1996 Jul 15
HISTORY
PUBSTATUS PUBSTATUSDATE
pubmed 1996/07/15
medline 2000/06/20 09:00
entrez 1996/07/15 00:00
AUTHORS
NAME COLLECTIVENAME LASTNAME FORENAME INITIALS AFFILIATION AFFILIATIONINFO
Aitken JF Aitken J F JF Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane, Australia.
Pfitzner J Pfitzner J J
Battistutta D Battistutta D D
O'Rourke PK O'Rourke P K PK
Green AC Green A C AC
Martin NG Martin N G NG
INVESTIGATORS
JOURNAL
VOLUME: 78
ISSUE: 2
TITLE: Cancer
ISOABBREVIATION: Cancer
YEAR: 1996
MONTH: Jul
DAY: 15
MEDLINEDATE:
SEASON:
CITEDMEDIUM: Print
ISSN: 0008-543X
ISSNTYPE: Print
MEDLINE JOURNAL
MEDLINETA: Cancer
COUNTRY: United States
ISSNLINKING: 0008-543X
NLMUNIQUEID: 0374236
PUBLICATION TYPE
PUBLICATIONTYPE TEXT
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Twin Study
COMMENTS AND CORRECTIONS
GRANTS
GENERAL NOTE
KEYWORDS
MESH HEADINGS
DESCRIPTORNAME QUALIFIERNAME
Adolescent
Child
Color
Diseases in Twins
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods
Longitudinal Studies methods
Male methods
Melanoma pathology
Nevus pathology
Pigmentation Disorders pathology
Precancerous Conditions pathology
Queensland pathology
Reproducibility of Results pathology
Skin Neoplasms pathology
Twins pathology
Videotape Recording pathology
SUPPLEMENTARY MESH
GENE SYMBOLS
CHEMICALS
OTHER ID's