TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical assessment of skin phototypes
T2 - Watch your words!
AU - Trakatelli, Myrto
AU - Bylaite-Bucinskiene, Matilda
AU - Correia, Osvaldo
AU - Cozzio, Antonio
AU - De Vries, Esther
AU - Medenica, Ljiljana
AU - Nagore, Eduardo
AU - Paoli, John
AU - Stratigos, Alexander J.
AU - Del Marmol, Véronique
AU - Bulliard, Jean Luc
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, John Libbey Eurotext. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/11/1
Y1 - 2017/11/1
N2 - Background: Fitzpatrick skin phototype classification is widely used to assess risk factors for skin cancers. This skin type evaluation is easy to use in clinical practice but is not always applied as initially described, nor practiced in a standardised way. This can have implications on the results of relevant dermato-epidemiological studies. Objectives: To demonstrate, in a large multinational setting, that the phrasing of questions on sun sensitivity can have a strong impact on the perception and reporting of skin phototype, as well as the importance of a standardised procedure for phototype assessment. Materials & methods: Using data collected from 48,258 screenees of the Euromelanoma campaign in six European countries from 2009 to 2011, we analysed the impact of change in the question phrasing on phototype classification in each country. Results: Changing the wording of a question to assess the phototype of a person also significantly influenced the classification of phototypes in different countries (p<0.001 for each country). The difference essentially corresponded to a shift towards a less sun-sensitive skin type when a shorter question that did not include skin colour description was used. The only exception was Portugal where phototype was not patient-assessed and classification shifted towards a more sun-sensitive phototype. Results were statistically significant and highly consistent, irrespective of gender. Conclusions: The phrasing of questions on skin type is important and substantially influences reporting. A standardized procedure to classify phototypes should be used in order to obtain comparable data between studies.
AB - Background: Fitzpatrick skin phototype classification is widely used to assess risk factors for skin cancers. This skin type evaluation is easy to use in clinical practice but is not always applied as initially described, nor practiced in a standardised way. This can have implications on the results of relevant dermato-epidemiological studies. Objectives: To demonstrate, in a large multinational setting, that the phrasing of questions on sun sensitivity can have a strong impact on the perception and reporting of skin phototype, as well as the importance of a standardised procedure for phototype assessment. Materials & methods: Using data collected from 48,258 screenees of the Euromelanoma campaign in six European countries from 2009 to 2011, we analysed the impact of change in the question phrasing on phototype classification in each country. Results: Changing the wording of a question to assess the phototype of a person also significantly influenced the classification of phototypes in different countries (p<0.001 for each country). The difference essentially corresponded to a shift towards a less sun-sensitive skin type when a shorter question that did not include skin colour description was used. The only exception was Portugal where phototype was not patient-assessed and classification shifted towards a more sun-sensitive phototype. Results were statistically significant and highly consistent, irrespective of gender. Conclusions: The phrasing of questions on skin type is important and substantially influences reporting. A standardized procedure to classify phototypes should be used in order to obtain comparable data between studies.
KW - Country
KW - Fitzpatrick skin phototype classification
KW - Phrasing
KW - Question
KW - Standardised procedure
KW - Sun sensitivity
KW - Wording
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040465881&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1684/ejd.2017.3129
DO - 10.1684/ejd.2017.3129
M3 - Article
C2 - 29171392
AN - SCOPUS:85040465881
SN - 1167-1122
VL - 27
SP - 615
EP - 619
JO - European Journal of Dermatology
JF - European Journal of Dermatology
IS - 6
ER -