Published August 1, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

AI assistance in aesthetic medicine–A consensus on objective medical standards

  • 1. University Hospital Regensburg
  • 2. New York University
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. Skin Alive Clinics
  • 5. Tennessee Clinical Research Center
  • 6. Rosenpark Klinik
  • 7. University of Hamburg
  • 8. Instituto de Dermatologia
  • 9. Medizin am Hauptbahnhof
  • 10. Erasmus Medical Centre
  • 11. University of California, San Diego
  • 12. Dermatology and Laser Center
  • 13. P-Skin Professional Clinic
  • 14. Mahidol University
  • 15. ICA Aesthetic Navigation GmbH
  • 16. Huang PH Dermatology and Aesthetics

Description

Background: Aesthetic medicine has traditionally relied on clinical scales for the objective assessment of baseline appearance and treatment outcomes. However, the scales focus on limited aesthetic areas mostly and subjective interpretation inherent in these scales can lead to variability, which undermines standardization efforts.

Objective: The consensus meeting aimed to establish guidelines for AI application in aesthetic medicine.

Materials and methods: In February 2024, the AI Consensus Group, comprising international experts in various specialties, convened to deliberate on AI in aesthetic medicine. The methodology included a pre-consensus survey and an iterative consensus process during the meeting.

Results: AI's implementation in Aesthetic Medicine has achieved full consensus for enhancing patient assessment and consultation, ensuring standardized care. AI's role in preventing overcorrection is recognized, alongside the need for validated objective facial assessments. Emphasis is placed on comprehensive facial aesthetic evaluations using indices such as the Facial Aesthetic Index (FAI), Facial Youth Index (FYI), and Skin Quality Index (SQI). These evaluations are to be gender-specific and exclude makeup-covered skin at baseline. Age and gender, as well as patients' ancestral roots, are to be considered integral to the AI assessment process, underlining the move towards personalized, precise treatments.

Conclusion: The consensus meeting established that AI will significantly improve aesthetic medicine by standardizing patient assessments and consultations, with a strong endorsement for preventing overcorrection and advocating for validated, objective facial assessments. Utilizing indices such as the FAI, FYI, and SQI allows for gender-specific, age adjusted evaluations and insists on a makeup-free baseline for accuracy.

Data availability

Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analyzed in this study.

Files

AI-assistance-in-aesthetic-medicine-A-consensus-on-objective-medical-standards.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/jocd.16481
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13040

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Medicine