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    Feasibility study of mobile phone photography as a possible outcome measure of systemic sclerosis-related digital lesions

    Davison, Adrian K, Dinsdale, Graham, New, Paul, Manning, Joanne, Patrick, Helen, Taxiarchi, Vicky P, Dixon, William G, Vail, Andy, Murray, Andrea K, Dickinson, Mark, Taylor, Christopher and Herrick, Ariane L (2022) Feasibility study of mobile phone photography as a possible outcome measure of systemic sclerosis-related digital lesions. Rheumatology Advances in Practice, 6 (3). rkac105-rkac105. ISSN 2514-1775

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    Abstract

    Objective: Clinical trials assessing systemic sclerosis (SSc)-related digital ulcers have been hampered by a lack of reliable outcome measures of healing. Our objective was to assess the feasibility of patients collecting high-quality mobile phone images of their digital lesions as a first step in developing a smartphone-based outcome measure. Methods: Patients with SSc-related digital (finger) lesions photographed one or more lesions each day for 30 days using their smartphone and uploaded the images to a secure Dropbox folder. Image quality was assessed using six criteria: blurriness, shadow, uniformity of lighting, dot location, dot angle and central positioning of the lesion. Patients completed a feedback questionnaire. Results: Twelve patients returned 332 photographs of 18 lesions. Each patient sent a median of 29.5 photographs [interquartile range (IQR) 15-33.5], with a median of 15 photographs per lesion (IQR 6-32). Twenty-two photographs were duplicates. Of the remaining 310 images, 256 (77%) were sufficiently in focus; 268 (81%) had some shadow; lighting was even in 56 (17%); dot location was acceptable in 233 (70%); dot angle was ideal in 107 (32%); and the lesion was centred in 255 (77%). Patient feedback suggested that 6 of 10 would be willing to record images daily in future studies, and 9 of 10 at least one to three times per week. Conclusion: Taking smartphone photographs of digital lesions was feasible for most patients, with most lesions in focus and central in the image. These promising results will inform the next research phase (to develop a smartphone monitoring application incorporating photographs and symptom tracking).

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