Detection of melanoma and a range of other skin diseases will be faster and more accurate with a new artificial intelligence (AI) powered tool that analyses multiple imaging types simultaneously, developed by an international team of researchers led by Monash University.
Featured in Nature Medicine today, PanDerm is one of the first AI models built specifically to assist with real-world dermatological medical practice by analysing multiple types of images, including close-up photos, dermoscopic images, pathology slides, and total body photographs.
A series of evaluations showed PanDerm improved skin cancer diagnosis accuracy by 11 per cent when used by doctors. The model helped non-dermatologist healthcare professionals improve diagnostic accuracy on various other skin conditions by 16.5 per cent.
It also showed the ability to detect skin cancer early, identifying concerning lesions before clinician detection.
Trained on more than two million skin images, data for the model was sourced from 11 institutions in multiple countries, across four types of medical images.
AI and computer vision expert and one of the lead co-authors of the research, Associate Professor Zongyuan Ge from Monash University’s Faculty of Information Technology, said existing AI models for dermatology remain limited to isolated tasks, such as diagnosing skin cancer from dermoscopic images; magnified images of skin captured using a dermoscope tool.
“Previous AI models have struggled to integrate and process various data types and imaging methods, reducing their usefulness to doctors in different real-world settings,” Associate Professor Ge said.
“PanDerm is a tool designed to work alongside clinicians, helping them interpret complex imaging data and make informed decisions with more confidence.”
Unlike existing models, which are trained to perform a single task, PanDerm was evaluated on a wide range of clinical tasks such as skin cancer screening, predicting the chance of cancer returning or spreading, skin type assessment, mole counting, tracking lesion changes, diagnosing a wide range of skin conditions, and segmenting lesions.
It consistently delivered best-in-class results, often with just 5-10 per cent of the labelled data normally required.
In clinical settings, PanDerm functions as a support tool that analyses the spectrum of skin images that doctors routinely use. The system processes these images and provides diagnostic probability assessments, helping clinicians interpret visual data with greater confidence.
This integration is particularly valuable for improving diagnostic accuracy among non-specialists, detecting subtle lesion changes over time, and assessing patient risk levels.
First author and PhD student Siyuan Yan from Monash University Faculty of Engineering said the multimodal approach was key to the system's success.
"By training PanDerm on diverse data from different imaging techniques, we've created a system that can understand skin conditions the way dermatologists do; by synthesising information from various visual sources," Mr Yan said.
"This allows for more holistic analysis of skin diseases than previous single-modality AI systems."
With skin conditions now impacting 70 per cent of the global population, early detection is crucial and can lead to better treatment outcomes.
Lead co-author of the paper, Alfred Health Victorian Melanoma Service Director, Professor Victoria Mar, said PanDerm shows promise in helping detect subtle changes in lesions over time and provide clues to lesion biology and future risk of spread.
“This kind of assistance could support earlier diagnosis and more consistent monitoring for patients at risk of melanoma,” Professor Mar said.
“In hospitals or clinic settings, doctors use diverse ways and different types of images to diagnose skin cancer or other skin conditions.”
University of Queensland Dermatology Research Centre Director and one of the lead co-authors of the research, Professor H. Peter Soyer, said differences in imaging and diagnosis techniques could also arise due to different levels of resources available in urban, regional and rural healthcare spaces.
“The strength of PanDerm lies in its ability to support existing clinical workflows,” Professor Soyer said
“It could be particularly valuable in busy or resource-limited settings, or in primary care where access to dermatologists may be limited.
“We have seen that the tool was also able to perform strongly even when trained on only a small amount of labelled data, a key advantage in diverse medical settings where standard annotated data is often limited.”
Senior co-author Professor Harald Kittler from Medical University of Vienna Department of Dermatology said PanDerm demonstrated how global collaboration and diverse clinical data can be used to build AI tools that are not only technically strong but also clinically relevant across different healthcare systems.
“Its ability to support diagnosis in varied real-world settings, including in Europe, is a step forward in making dermatological expertise more accessible and consistent worldwide,” Professor Kittler said.
Though showing promising research results, PanDerm is currently in the evaluation phase before broader healthcare implementation.
Looking to the future, the researchers aim to develop more comprehensive evaluation frameworks that address a wider range of dermatological conditions and clinical variants.
The team plans to establish standardised protocols for cross-demographic assessments and further investigate the model's performance in varied real-world clinical settings, with a particular focus on ensuring equitable performance across different patient populations and healthcare environments.
The research was led by AI and machine learning experts at the Monash AIM for Health Lab at Monash’s Faculty of Information Technology in collaboration with researchers and clinicians at Alfred Health, The University of Queensland, Medical University of Vienna, NVIDIA AI Technology Centre in Singapore, Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane, University of Florence, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, NSW Health Pathology and Hospital General Universitario de Alicante in Spain.
To read the full research paper, please click here.
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MEDIA ENQUIRIES
Teju Hari Krishna
Media and Communications Adviser, Monash University
M: +61 450 501 248 E: teju.harikrishna@monash.edu
Journal
Nature Medicine
Method of Research
Imaging analysis
Subject of Research
Not applicable
Article Title
A multimodal vision foundation model for clinical dermatology
Article Publication Date
6-Jun-2025
COI Statement
Z.G., V.M., H.P.S., M.J. and P.G. are chief investigators for the Australian Centre of Excellence for Melanoma Imaging and Diagnosis (ACEMID), which was established via an Australian Cancer Research Foundation Major Infrastructure Grant, with research activities supported by NHMRC grants (Cohort Study Grant APP2001517, Centre of Research Excellence Grant APP2044753, Synergy Grant APP2009923) and MRFF Targeted Health System and Community Organisation Research Grant (APP1175082). Z.G. is on the scientific advisory board and a consultant for Optain Health. Although Airdoc has philanthropic donation to the AIM for Health Lab, the company was not involved in any aspect of this research. H.P.S. reported equity in e-derm-consult GmbH and MoleMap NZ Limited, consulting fees from Canfield Scientific Inc and a patent (PCT/AU/2013/000394) licensed to Trajan Medical and Scientific via Uniquest, all outside the submitted work. He is also an executive board member of the International Dermoscopy Society and the Australian Melanoma Clinical Outcome Registry. M.J. holds National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) TRIP Fellowships (APP2006551, APP2009923 and APP2034422). P.T. has received speaker fees from AbbVie and unrestricted educational grants from Lilly. He is an executive board member of the International Dermoscopy Society and past president of the Austrian Society of Dermatopathology. S.S., V.T. and A.B.N. are employees of NVIDIA and own Restricted Stocks. H.K. has received speaker fees from Fotofinder, MSD, Novartis and Pelpharma; license fees from Casio; and equipment from Fotofinder, Casio and Heine. He has served as an advisor for Fotofinder, La Roche-Posay and AI Medical Technology, and is a member of the executive board of the International Dermoscopy Society. P.G. has received honoraria from Metaoptima PTY and travel stipend from L’Oreal. V.M. is supported by an NHMRC Investigator Grant (APP2034976). V.M. has received Victorian Medical Research Acceleration Fund support for the SMARTI Trial with matched contribution from MoleMap; speaker fees from Novartis, Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck and Janssen; and conference travel support from L’Oreal and has participated in advisory boards for MSD, L’Oreal and SkylineDx. V.M. is a board member of the Melanoma and Skin Cancer Trials Group and an advisory member for the Melanoma and Skin Cancer Advocacy Network. The other authors declare no competing interests.