Poly-l-lactic acid (PLLA-SCA; Sculptra) was approved in 1999 in Europe and 2004 in United States as a collagen biostimulator. It is a freeze-dried preparation containing 150 mg PLLA-SCA per vial and, since approval, has been recommended to be reconstituted 72 h before treatment, which can hinder its use in clinical practice. In 2021, the manufacturer authorized the reconstitution of PLLA-SCA immediately before use. To evaluate adverse events in patients treated with immediately reconstituted PLLA-SCA on the face, body, and scars. This was a retrospective analysis of medical records of patients treated with immediately reconstituted PLLA-SCA for aesthetic purposes from January 1, 2021, to December 31, 2021, at two medical centers. A total of 274 treatment sessions were conducted on 167 patients (ranging from 1 to 5 sessions per patient). Of these, 228 sessions (151 patients) targeted the face, 39 sessions (22 patients) addressed the body, and 7 sessions (5 patients) focused on scars. The mean final concentration of PLLA-SCA was 15.30 mg/mL for the face, 8.35 mg/mL for the body, and 10.53 mg/mL for scars. The majority of injections were administered with a blunt cannula (face: 87.3%, body: 100%, scars: 57%), and in 6 out of 7 scar treatments, PLLA-SCA was additionally applied topically after fractional treatment. One patient developed a PLLA-SCA nodule 30 days after facial treatment, which resolved after two saline injections. The most common adverse events were bruising (face: 6.57%, body: 7.69%) and mild pain (face: 3.07%). No events required further intervention. This study reports an adverse event profile with immediately reconstituted PLLA-SCA, used on the face, body, and scars, similar to that reported with PLLA-SCA reconstituted 72 h prior to use. This was a retrospective study of medical records at two medical centers, and trial registration was not required.