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This study aims to develop expert consensus on the safe and effective use of poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) biostimulators in aesthetic dermatology across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. PLLA is a commonly used injectable treatment that stimulates collagen production, but most guidelines come from Western populations and do not address the unique characteristics of Fitzpatrick III-VI skin types, which are predominant in the MENA region.
The study uses a Modified Delphi method, a well-established approach for collecting and refining expert agreement. Dermatologists and aesthetic physicians from MENA countries will participate in two to three online rounds of surveys. In Round 1, experts will answer open-ended questions about indications, contraindications, dilution techniques, safety concerns, anatomical considerations, and training needs related to PLLA. Their responses will be analyzed and converted into structured statements.
In Round 2, experts will rate each statement using a 1-to-9 Likert scale, indicating their level of agreement. Items with high agreement will form part of the final consensus. Statements with uncertain or conflicting ratings may undergo a third round for clarification.
No patients are involved in the study, and no treatments or interventions will be administered. The study collects professional opinions only, and all responses are anonymized during analysis. The final output will be a region-specific clinical guideline to support safer and more standardized PLLA use across the MENA region. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and shared with the aesthetic medical community.
Full description
Study Overview This study is a non-interventional, observational expert consensus project designed to develop region-specific guidelines for the use of poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) biostimulators in aesthetic dermatology across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. PLLA is widely used for collagen stimulation and facial rejuvenation, but existing evidence and guidelines are derived primarily from Western populations. Given that Fitzpatrick III-VI skin types dominate the MENA region, and that anatomical, cultural, and safety considerations differ, a structured expert consensus is required to optimize clinical practice.
Study Design
This study uses a Modified Delphi methodology, incorporating principles from the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. The Delphi process includes 2-3 survey rounds:
Round 1 (Qualitative Item Generation):
Experts complete an open-ended questionnaire addressing indications, contraindications, dilution protocols, injection techniques, safety concerns (including risk of papules and PIH), anatomical considerations, combination treatments, follow-up practices, regulatory issues, training requirements, and research priorities. Responses undergo thematic analysis to generate structured candidate statements.
Round 2 (Quantitative Consensus Rating):
The consolidated statements are rated using a 9-point Likert scale (1 = inappropriate, 9 = appropriate). Experts rate each item independently based on clinical relevance, safety, and applicability in MENA populations.
Optional Round 3:
Statements without clear consensus are redistributed with anonymized group statistics for re-rating. This step is used only if needed to refine borderline items.
Expert Panel Selection
Experts will be eligible if they meet at least two of the following:
Consensus Definitions
The study follows RAND/UCLA criteria:
VRC-developed materials include:
Ethical Considerations This study does not involve patients, clinical interventions, or personal health information. Participation is voluntary. Expert responses are anonymized. No foreseeable risks are associated with participation, and the study qualifies as minimal-risk, non-interventional research.
Outcomes and Dissemination The primary outcome is a set of consensus-based, region-specific recommendations for PLLA use in aesthetic practice. Secondary outcomes include identification of training standards and research priorities. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations, and a VRC-branded clinical guideline.
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15 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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