Abstract

BackgroundValidated, objective clinical scales are needed to assess aesthetic improvement of the lips after augmentation with dermal fillers.ObjectiveTo develop a lip fullness rating scale and establish its reliability for grading subjects in clinical trials or routine practice, and sensitivity for detecting clinically meaningful changes.MethodsThe Teoxane Lip Fullness Scale (TLFS), a proprietary, 5‐grade photonumeric scale, was developed by clinical experts based on real subject photographs and was validated through both photographic and live subjects' evaluation.ResultsClinician intra‐ and inter‐rater agreement for the TLFS was substantial to almost perfect. Mean intra‐rater weighted Kappa score between the two rounds of photographic validation was 0.92, and inter‐rater agreement was substantial with an ICC of 0.93 for the combined rounds. Average intra‐rater weighted Kappa score and inter‐rater ICC for the live validation were equally high, reaching 0.91 and 0.89 respectively. Additionally, evaluators identified clinically significant differences between photographs of subjects presenting a 1‐grade or 2‐grade difference on the scale in 90% and 98% of cases, respectively.ConclusionsThe intra‐rater Kappa scores and inter‐rater ICC met their pre‐determined acceptance criteria of >0.70 in the photographic and live validation. The TLFS was shown to be a repeatable and reproducible Clinician Reported Outcome (Clin‐RO) for healthcare providers to classify lip fullness both in clinical trials and in routine patient care. A 1‐grade difference on the TLFS can detect a clinically meaningful difference in lip fullness.

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