AI Article Synopsis

  • Clinicians face challenges in treating actinic keratosis (AK), such as inconsistencies in evaluating AK lesions, a lack of standardized definitions for related conditions like field cancerization, and issues with reproducibility in lesion classification.
  • Current guidelines for assessing AK severity often depend on lesion count, which can vary among specialists, complicating the classification and monitoring of AK.
  • The article aims to address these issues by reviewing clinical scales for AK classification, discussing common questions in practice, and proposing strategies for better diagnosis and management of AK patients.

Article Abstract

Difficulties faced by clinicians in routine clinical practice when selecting the appropriate treatment for patients with actinic keratosis (AK) include: the independent evaluation of AK lesions, the absence of a standardized definition of field cancerization (FC), and the lack of a reproducible classification to grade the entire AK-affected area. Moreover, to assess the severity of AK, most guidelines rely on lesion count, which is often not reproducible among specialists. The present work has 2 main objectives: first, to review and highlight some of the issues clinicians tackle when classifying and monitoring AK lesions and the status of FC, looking in more detail at some of the most commonly used clinical scales for classifying AK lesions. Second, we pose questions that we encounter in daily clinical practice, and whose answers or comments help to deal with cases of AK, facilitating the work of clinicians: How should we approach AK diagnosis? How do the challenges of clinical studies on the evaluation of treatment efficacy translate into clinical practice? We review the literature on the clinical classifications and management of AK, and propose how to guide the diagnosis, management, and monitoring of patients with AK. J Drugs Dermatol. 2022;21(8):845-849. doi:10.36849/JDD.6704.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.36849/JDD.6704DOI Listing

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