2017
DOI: 10.1111/bjd.15999
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Developing and validating the Cutaneous WARTS (CWARTS) diagnostic tool: a novel clinical assessment and classification system for cutaneous warts

Abstract: SummaryBackground The clinical appearance of cutaneous warts is highly variable and not standardized. Objectives To develop and validate a reproducible clinical tool for the standardized assessment of cutaneous warts to distinguish these lesions accurately. Methods Nine morphological characteristics were defined and validated regarding intra-and interobserver agreement. Based on literature and semistructured interviews, a systematic dichotomous assessment tool, the Cutaneous WARTS (CWARTS) diagnostic tool was … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
(24 reference statements)
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“…A new clinical diagnostic tool for warts, the CWARTS tool, was developed and validated in an earlier study . In the current study this tool was implemented.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A new clinical diagnostic tool for warts, the CWARTS tool, was developed and validated in an earlier study . In the current study this tool was implemented.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Photographs were taken by a trained research nurse using the Dino‐Lite digital microscope (AnMo Electronics Corporation, Hsinchu City, Taiwan), set to a fixed scale of ‘20’ resulting in a scale of 5·7 : 1 and using a standard object that assured a standard camera–wart distance from a selection of the patients who were included in the WARTS‐2 trial. At an earlier stage, a clinical assessment tool, the CWARTS tool, had been developed and validated for inter‐ and intraobserver agreement by respectively 18 and six physicians with a different set of pictures based on the score of nine dichotomized morphological characteristics: (i) arrangement (confluent/multiple or solitary); (ii) level (elevated or skin level); (iii) aspect (rough/lobed or smooth/not lobed); (iv) border (sharply or not sharply circumscribed); (v) colour (lighter/skin colour/yellow or red); (vi) presence of white skin flakes; (vii) presence of black dots (capillary thrombosis); (viii) border erythema; and (ix) callus . In short, inter‐ and intraobserver agreement for most characteristics was moderate to strong with average intraclass correlation coefficients of 0·51 and 0·42, respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, wart morphology was assessed to confirm or reject the hypothesis that wart size reduction could be predicted by the morphological aspects of all warts in this study. Standardized photographs of the primary wart were taken and wart morphology was assessed using the CWARTS diagnostic tool . Complete responders were defined as showing a reduction of 100% in size, partial responders a reduction of 25–100% and nonresponders < 25% reduction at the EOS compared with baseline.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinically, many lesions have characteristic small black dots that are considered to represent thrombi in dermal vessels. 1 This concept has been taught by dermatologists over many decades and is found in the newest versions of our standard literature. 2,3 However, to our knowledge, this concept has not been sufficiently substantiated by morphologic studies.…”
Section: Black Dots In Palmoplantar Warts-challenging a Concept: A Histopathologic Studymentioning
confidence: 99%