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OncoMatch/Clinical Trials/NCT06627036

Dermoscopy vs Standard Marking for the Completeness of Excision of Keratinocyte Skin Cancers: The ClearMark Trial

Is NCT06627036 recruiting? Yes, currently enrolling (May 2026). This Phase 4 trial studies Dermatoscope for keratinocyte skin cancer.

Phase 4RecruitingHull University Teaching Hospitals NHS TrustNCT06627036Data as of May 2026

Treatment: DermatoscopeWhat is the study about? This study aims to improve the success rate of removal surgery for a common type of skin cancer. We will compare two different methods of marking (drawing where to remove) the skin before removing the lump: the normal method using magnifying glasses and theatre lights, and our proposed method using a handheld magnifying device called a dermatoscope. Why is this study important? Skin cancer is the most common cancer in the UK. Currently, up to 10-11% of surgeries do not remove all of the cancer, which means patients may need more treatment. We do not know whether using a dermatoscope can help surgeons remove all of the cancer more often or not. If it does, it could prevent patients needing more surgery or time in hospital. What will happen during the study? A computer will randomly allocate each participant to marking using the normal method, or using a dermatoscope. The surgery will then proceed as usual. After the surgery, patients will be asked to fill in a simple questionnaire about their thoughts. We will collect data from patients' notes to monitor the success of the surgery and any more treatments needed. What will we measure? We will check participants records to see if the cancer was entirely removed. This is reported by a pathologist whenever a skin lump or bump is removed. In time, we will also look at 5-year recurrence of cancer, the need for additional treatments, any problems from the marking process, how happy patients are with the process, and the time it takes to perform the marking. What is the pilot for? The study will need many hundreds of patients to pick up a meaningful result. Before we commit to recruiting this many people, we want to make sure that the way we run the study is acceptable. This means looking at the number of people we recruit each week, how easy it is to collect their data after their operation, and whether there are any areas that we can't use a dermatoscope, such as the curves around the eye, nose and ears. We will run the study in a smaller number of people (around 200) before deciding whether we can commit to recruiting everyone. This will also give us the chance to see whether we can run the study in more than one hospital.

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Eligibility summary

For patients with Keratinocyte Skin Cancer.

This summary was generated by AI from the trial's official eligibility criteria and may contain errors. Always confirm with the study team before contacting a site.

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