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A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Weir, VR; Dempsey, K; Gichoya, JW; Rotemberg, V; Wong, A-KI
Published in: NPJ Digit Med
July 17, 2024

Increasing evidence supports reduced accuracy of noninvasive assessment tools, such as pulse oximetry, temperature probes, and AI skin diagnosis benchmarks, in patients with darker skin tones. The FDA is exploring potential strategies for device regulation to improve performance across diverse skin tones by including skin tone criteria. However, there is no consensus about how prospective studies should perform skin tone assessment in order to take this bias into account. There are several tools available to conduct skin tone assessments including administered visual scales (e.g., Fitzpatrick Skin Type, Pantone, Monk Skin Tone) and color measurement tools (e.g., reflectance colorimeters, reflectance spectrophotometers, cameras), although none are consistently used or validated across multiple medical domains. Accurate and consistent skin tone measurement depends on many factors including standardized environments, lighting, body parts assessed, patient conditions, and choice of skin tone assessment tool(s). As race and ethnicity are inadequate proxies for skin tone, these considerations can be helpful in standardizing the effect of skin tone on studies such as AI dermatology diagnoses, pulse oximetry, and temporal thermometers. Skin tone bias in medical devices is likely due to systemic factors that lead to inadequate validation across diverse skin tones. There is an opportunity for researchers to use skin tone assessment methods with standardized considerations in prospective studies of noninvasive tools that may be affected by skin tone. We propose considerations that researchers must take in order to improve device robustness to skin tone bias.

Duke Scholars

Published In

NPJ Digit Med

DOI

EISSN

2398-6352

Publication Date

July 17, 2024

Volume

7

Issue

1

Start / End Page

191

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 4203 Health services and systems
 

Citation

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Weir, V. R., Dempsey, K., Gichoya, J. W., Rotemberg, V., & Wong, A.-K. (2024). A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research. NPJ Digit Med, 7(1), 191. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01176-8
Weir, Vanessa R., Katelyn Dempsey, Judy Wawira Gichoya, Veronica Rotemberg, and An-Kwok Ian Wong. “A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research.NPJ Digit Med 7, no. 1 (July 17, 2024): 191. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01176-8.
Weir VR, Dempsey K, Gichoya JW, Rotemberg V, Wong A-KI. A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research. NPJ Digit Med. 2024 Jul 17;7(1):191.
Weir, Vanessa R., et al. “A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research.NPJ Digit Med, vol. 7, no. 1, July 2024, p. 191. Pubmed, doi:10.1038/s41746-024-01176-8.
Weir VR, Dempsey K, Gichoya JW, Rotemberg V, Wong A-KI. A survey of skin tone assessment in prospective research. NPJ Digit Med. 2024 Jul 17;7(1):191.

Published In

NPJ Digit Med

DOI

EISSN

2398-6352

Publication Date

July 17, 2024

Volume

7

Issue

1

Start / End Page

191

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 4203 Health services and systems