| Literature DB >> 27660479 |
Adri D Prasetyo1, Welf Prager2, Mark G Rubin3, Ernesto A Moretti4, Andreas Nikolis5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cohesive monophasic polydensified fillers show unique viscoelastic properties and variable density of hyaluronic acid, allowing for a homogeneous tissue integration and distribution of the material.Entities:
Keywords: CPM®; dermal filler; facial lines; filling; nasolabial fold; wrinkle
Year: 2016 PMID: 27660479 PMCID: PMC5021061 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S106551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Key characteristics and indications of Belotero® dermal fillers and hyaluronic acid fillers used as comparators in split-face, randomized controlled trials
| Brand name | Type of filler, crosslinking technology, and HA concentration (C) | Indications and depth of injection | Countries with marketing authorization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belotero® Hydro | Non-crosslinked product; also contains glycerol; C =18 mg/mL | Improvement of skin hydration, radiance, and elasticity; to be injected into the superficial dermis | EU |
| Belotero® Soft | Crosslinked product; cohesive (monophasic) polydensified filler, CPM® technology; C =20 mg/mL | Correction of fine lines (eg, crow’s feet, perioral lines, fine forehead lines); also suitable for lip enhancement and correction of facial atrophic scars; to be injected into the superficial-to-mid dermis | EU |
| Belotero® Basic/Balance | Crosslinked product; cohesive (monophasic) polydensified filler, CPM® technology; C =22.5 mg/mL | Correction of moderate lines (eg, moderate nasolabial wrinkles, glabellar lines, moderate perioral wrinkles, lip contouring, philtrum); also suitable for lip enhancement and correction of facial atrophic scars; to be injected into the superficial-to-mid dermis | EU |
| Belotero® Intense | Crosslinked product; cohesive (monophasic) polydensified filler, CPM® technology; C =25.5 mg/mL | Correction of deeper lines (eg, severe NLF, lip volume, oral commissures, marionette folds); also suitable for correction of facial atrophic scars; to be injected into the deep dermis | EU |
| Belotero® Volume | Crosslinked product; cohesive (monophasic) polydensified filler, CPM® technology; C =26 mg/mL | Restoration of facial volumes (eg, cheeks, temples, facial volume loss); to be injected into the deep dermis, subcutaneously or on the upper periostea | EU |
| Restylane® | Non-cohesive (biphasic) filler, NASHA® technology; C =20 mg/mL | Correction of moderate or severe wrinkles and folds, lip enhancement; to be injected into the mid-to-deep dermis | EU |
| Juvéderm® Ultra 3 | Cohesive (monophasic) monodensified filler, Hylacross® technology; C =24 mg/mL | Correction of moderate or severe wrinkles and folds, lip enhancement; to be injected into the mid-to-deep dermis | EU |
Note:
The listed countries are the ones where the brand Belotero® is on the market, excluding the ones with the sister brands marketed by Anteis.
Abbreviations: CPM®, cohesive polydensified matrix; EU, European Union; HA, hyaluronic acid; NASHA®, nonanimal-stabilized hyaluronic acid; NLF, nasolabial fold.
Belotero® dermal fillers: summary of the study design, methods, and main end points
| Study, design, and indication | Treatments and population | Injection technique | Mean injected volume | Time points and assessments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCT (and extension) with comparator(s) | ||||
| Prager and Steinkraus | Belotero® Basic (n=20) vs Restylane® (n=20) | |||
| 20 patients (19 females) | Single injection in the mid-to-deep dermis, using the standard threading and/or multiple puncture techniques | 1.4 mL for each product | Baseline, 4 weeks | |
| Prager et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=20) vs Restylane® (n=20) (Arm A); Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=20) vs Juvéderm® Ultra 3 (n=20) (Arm B) | |||
| Arm A and Arm B: 20 patients (19 females) each | Single injection in the mid-to-deep dermis, with a 27 G needle, using the threading or multiple puncture technique | Arm A: 1.41 mL for Belotero®, 1.37 mL for Restylane®; Arm B: 1.42 mL for Belotero®, 1.43 mL for Juvéderm® | Baseline, 4 weeks, then 6, 9, and 12 months | |
| Narins et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance vs collagen | |||
| 118 patients (92.4% females), with 106 patients completing | Injection using cross-hatching or tunneling technique (site not specified), optional touch-up session after 2 weeks | 1.16 mL Belotero® vs 1.37 mL collagen | Baseline, 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, and 24 weeks | |
| Narins et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (vs collagen during RCT) | |||
| 85 completed the extension study (89.5%) | Touch-up injection possible at 32, 48, 72, and 96 weeks | At 24 weeks: 0.71 mL for Belotero®, 1.04 mL for collagen (further injections at subsequent visits) | NLF severity: WSRS (by investigator), GAIS (by investigator and patient), treatment longevity 24 weeks (=baseline), then 32, 48, 72, and 96 weeks (after primary RCT) | |
| Study design other than RCT | ||||
| Gregory | Belotero® Basic/Balance | |||
| 448 patients, representing a total of 563 facial treatments | Injection with 30 G needle, mostly into the superficial dermis using a serial puncture technique | Not reported | Follow-up (timing not specified) | |
| Dirting et al | Belotero® Basic | |||
| 114 patients (90% females) mean ± SD age: 50.2±7.1 years | Injection in the mid dermis without overcorrection, using linear technique, stratum technique, or a combination of both | 1 mL on each side | Baseline, post-injection, then at 2, 4, 12, and 24 weeks, follow-up at 36 weeks optional | |
| Kühne et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance | |||
| 317 patients (312 females, 98.4%; 309 Caucasians, 97.5%) and 668 treatments | Injection intradermally or superficially subdermally, with sharp needles (27, 28, or 30 G depending on the depth of injection and area to be treated), using microdroplet, linear threading, fanning, cross-hatching, or bolus | 0.2–3.0 mL, depending on the area treated | 5-Year review | |
| Downie et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance | |||
| 93 patients (80 females) | Multiple injection in the mid-to-deep dermis with a 27 or 30 G needle, optional touch-up session after 2 weeks | Up to 3 mL per NLF over two sessions | Baseline, 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, and 24 weeks | |
| Gilbert and Calvisi | Belotero® Balance (n=1), Restylane® + lidocaine (n=1), Perlane® + lidocaine (n=1), Juvéderm® Voluma/Volift/Volbella + lidocaine (n=3), Radiesse® (n=1) | |||
| Seven patients (seven females) | Belotero® Basic/Balance injected into the lips with a 32 G needle | 1 mL | Discussion regarding the choice of each filler (no formal efficacy assessments) | |
| Goh et al | Belotero® Balance (n=5) and Restylane®-L (n=5) | |||
| Ten patients (eight females) | Injection along or 2–6 mm below the infraorbital rim, with 30 G needle using a combination of direct serial puncture and retrograde linear threading technique | 1 mL of filler (0.5 on each side) | Before and immediately after injection | |
| Hevia et al | Belotero® Balance | |||
| 49 patients, with 46 patients (38 females) completers | Repeated injections with a 30 G needle, using retrograde injection | 0.92 mL on each side at baseline, 0.27 mL at touch-up, and 0.21 mL at 6 months (re-treatment) | Baseline, 2, 8, 24, and 40 weeks | |
| Wollina | Belotero® Basic (n=21), Glytone® 3 (n=10), and Radiesse® (calcium hydroxyapatite, n=9) | |||
| 40 patients (all females) mean ± SD age: 50±11.1 years (range: 32–90 years) | Single injection with a 30 G needle, using linear threading technique | 0.2–0.6 mL for HA fillers (different volume for Radiesse®) | Baseline, 2 or 3 weeks | |
| Effect of lidocaine | ||||
| Moradi et al | Belotero® Balance (BEL, n=10), Belotero® Balance with lidocaine (BEL + lido, n=10), Belotero®Balance with lidocaine + epinephrine (BEL + lido + epi, n =10) | |||
| 30 females | Injection with a 30 G needle, into the superficial dermis using serial punctures and linear threading techniques | 1 mL per side | Baseline, days 1, 7, and 14 | |
| Prager and Micheels | Belotero® Basic/Balance with/without lidocaine | |||
| 29 females | Technique depended on the site but was identical on both half-face, use of needle or cannula, either manually or with the aid of an injection system, most often in the superficial dermis (62.1%) | 1 mL maximum on each side of the face, per zone | No specific time points (survey) | |
| Study design other than RCT | ||||
| Succi et al | Mesolis® Plus | |||
| 20 patients (all females) | Injection in the superficial dermis with 30 G needle, using the micropuncture technique | 0.74 mL per session | Baseline, 2 weeks after sessions 2 and 3 | |
| Bezzola and Micheels | Esthélis® Basic and Soft | |||
| 36 patients | Injection with 27 or 30 G needle into the superficial dermis, blanket method with the whitening technique, or into the middle or deep dermis, using point-by-point injection (Soft) or retro-tracing or prograde technique (Basic) | Soft: 0.1–0.6 mL per treatment session, one or two treatment sessions | Baseline, day 180 (~6 months) | |
| Micheels | Esthélis® Basic and Soft | |||
| 13 patients (ten females) out of the 36 included in the pilot study | Single injection with 30 G needle (for the patients who did the follow-up) | Not reported | 24 months safety follow-up | |
| Hasson and Romero | Esthélis® Basic or Soft | |||
| 12 patients | Injection with 30 G needle into the superficial or mid dermis, using linear threading, serial puncture, or a combination of both | Injected volume depended on the depth and extension of the scar | Baseline, 1 week, and 1 month | |
| Pavicic et al | Belotero® (Soft/Basic/Intense) after Bocouture®(botulinum toxin) and Radiesse®(calcium hydroxyapatite)/[Bocouture® + Radiesse®] + Belotero® Soft, Basic, and Intense (Patient A), Belotero® Basic and Intense (Patient B), or Belotero® Soft and Basic (Patient C) | |||
| Three patients (all females) | Sequential approach: Bocouture® first, then Radiesse® 1 month later, and Belotero® 2–4 weeks later | Soft: 0.1–0.2 mL per site | Baseline, at each treatment visit, then 11 or 14 days after the last treatment | |
| RCT with comparator(s) | ||||
| Buntrock et al | Belotero® Intense vs Perlane® | |||
| 20 patients (18 females) | Single injection in deep dermis, using 27 G needle and standard serial puncture technique | 1 mL per side | Baseline, 2, 24, and 48 weeks | |
| Study design other than RCT | ||||
| Pavicic et al | Belotero® Basic and Belotero® Intense combined | |||
| Two HIV-infected patients | Case 1: three syringes Basic at baseline, then two and one syringes Basic at 6 and 12months, respectively, then two syringes | Up to 2 mL at each treatment session, in both cases | Case 1: baseline, then 6, 12, 18, and 30 months | |
| Micheels | Fortélis® Extra | |||
| 28 patients (20 females) | Injection in the mid-to-deep dermis, with a Kendall-type 27 G needle, using preferably the retrograde tunneling (or slow local infiltration to create volume) | Reported for some patients but not the whole sample | Efficacy: baseline, 6 months, ≥10 months | |
| Pavicic | Belotero® Intense alone (n=110) or combined with Belotero® Basic (sandwich procedure, n =39) | |||
| 149 patients (88.9% females) | Injection of Belotero® Intense into the deep dermis with a 27 G needle, using varioustechniques: linear threading, serial puncture, fanning, criss-cross, or the sandwich technique (Intense first, then Basic into the mid dermis) | 1 mL on each side (range 0.3–5.0 mL) | Baseline, immediately after injection, and at 2 and 12 weeks | |
| Study design other than RCTs | ||||
| Micheels et al | Belotero® Volume | |||
| 56 patients | Majority of injections performed at a deep dermal/hypodermal depth or to the level of the supraperiosteal plane, using needle or cannula (most common size: 27 G, 46.3% of cases; 25 G, 25.9% of cases) | 0.58 mL per side | Baseline, 1, 3, and 6 months | |
| Becker et al | Modélis® Shape | |||
| Ten male patients | Subdermal injection in submalar area with 25 G short needle completed with 22 G microcannula of 50 mm length, using a retrograde and fanning technique, optional touch-up session after 2 weeks | 1.3 mL per cheek | Baseline, 1, 6, and 12 months HA volume, skin thickness, and tissue vascularization by MRI | |
| Micheels et al | Modélis® Shape/Belotero® Volume | |||
| 20 patients | Injection in lateral cheek hollow (n=8), cheekbone area (n=6), or both (n=6), with needles and cannulae, using different methods depending on the investigator. | 2.1 mL for both sides for injection in lateral cheek hollow, 2.1 mL for injection in cheekbone area, 3.37 mL for injection in both | Baseline, immediately after injection, and 1, 3, 6, 9, 12 (and optionally 18) months | |
Note:
Studies with the same superscript letter were conducted in the same patients (eg, RCT and extension study).
Abbreviations: AEs, adverse events; FVLS, Facial Volume Loss Scale; GAIS, Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale; HA, hyaluronic acid; MAS, Merz Aesthetics Scales; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NLF, nasolabial fold; PRIMOS, phase-shift rapid in vivo measurement of skin; RCT, randomized controlled trial; VAS, visual analog scale; WSRS, Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale.
Performance assessment of dermal fillers: rating scales, and investigator’s and patient’s satisfaction
| Assessment Rating scales | Description | End points/definition | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| WSRS | Discrete 5-point scale | Fold severity | |
| GAIS (not validated) | Discrete 5-point scale | Esthetic outcomes compared to baseline | |
| VAS fill state | Continuous scale (0%–100%) | Fold correction (ie, improvement) rated from 0% to 100% | |
| Overall esthetic effect | Discrete 6-point scale | From 1 – excellent to 6 – unsatisfactory | |
| FVLS | Discrete 5-point scale | From 1 – mild flattening/no visibility of underlying tissue, to 5 – severe indentation of one or more facial regions/clear visibility of underlying tissue | |
| Facial lipoatrophy severity scale | Discrete 4-point scale | From 1 – mild and localized facial lipoatrophy, to 4 – lipoatrophy covers a wide area, extending up toward the eye sockets, and the facial skin lies directly on the muscles | |
| MAS | Discrete 5-point scales | Scales for the lower face (NLFs, marionette lines, upper and lower lip fullness, lip wrinkles, oral commissures, and jawline) | |
| Hirmand’s classification | Discrete 3-point scale | Severity of tear trough deformity | |
| Physician’s clinical global assessment | Discrete 7-point scale | Rating of skin’s appearance (brightness, texture, and turgor), from 100% improvement down to worsening | |
| Practitioner’s satisfaction | Ease of use, esthetic outcomes, etc | Overall satisfaction/preference | |
| Patient’s satisfaction | Various assessments | Overall satisfaction/preference | |
| Pain (VAS) | Discrete 11-point scale | 0 – no pain to 10 – worst imaginable pain | |
| Treatment longevity | Various assessments | Percentage of patients not requiring injections; percentage of patients who persist without repeat treatment for a given length of time; cumulative number of injections received for a given length of time; average time between injections; time lag between the first and the second treatment sessions | |
Note: The last column (“Reference”) refers to the publication describing/validating the scale, if any.
Abbreviations: FVLS, Facial Volume Loss Scale; GAIS, Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale; MAS, Merz Aesthetics Scales; NLF, nasolabial fold; VAS, visual analog scale; WSRS, Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale.
Belotero® dermal fillers: summary of clinical findings
| Study, design, and indication | Treatments and performance | Pain, safety, and tolerability | Investigator’s and patient’s satisfaction | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCT (and extension) with comparator(s) | |||||
| Prager and Steinkraus | Belotero® Basic (n=20) vs Restylane® (n=20) | ||||
| Mean reduction in wrinkle depth at 4 weeks: greater with Belotero® (−109.5 µm) than with Restylane® (−71.8 µm, | Pain immediately after injection (by VAS): lower with Belotero® (ns) | Patient’s satisfaction: felt the implant: 65% with Belotero®, 75% with Restylane® 55% would recommend both products | |||
| Prager et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=20) vs Restylane® (n=20) (Arm A); Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=20) vs Juvéderm® Ultra 3 (n=20) (Arm B) | ||||
| NLF severity: lowest score obtained at week 4, regardless of the filler (0.8 or 0.9, depending on Arm). Scores still lower at 12 months (1.5 or 1.6) than at baseline (2.3), for all fillers | Most common AEs: erythema (Belotero® Arm A + B n=14, 35%; Restylane® n=6, 30%; Juvéderm® n=8, 40%), hematoma (Belotero® Arm A + B n=4, 10%; Restylane® n=3, 15%; Juvéderm® n=4, 20%), edema (Belotero® Arm A + B n=1, 2.5%; Restylane® n=0, 0%; Juvéderm® n=5, 25%) | Patient’s satisfaction: both fillers acceptable: Arm A 55%, Arm B 25% | |||
| Narins et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance vs collagen (n=118) | ||||
| Change in WSRS at 12 weeks (by blinded rater) greater with Belotero® ( | Injection-site pain: 44.9% with Belotero®, 53.4% with collagen; generally mild to moderate | Patient’s questionnaire (n=107): 79.4% preferred Belotero® at 24 weeks. Improvement and satisfaction (VAS) rated at 74.7% and 78.2% with Belotero® vs 66.0% and 65.1% with collagen Five out of six investigators preferred Belotero® because of its storage and handling, and comfort, and design of its syringe (two out of six investigators also preferred Belotero® because of the ease of injection) | |||
| Narins et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (vs collagen during RCT) (n =95 out of the 106 completers of RCT) | ||||
| At weeks 32, 48, 72, and 96, decrease in NLF severity on both sides, but greater with Belotero® (statistical comparison not performed) | 34 AEs reported in 24.2% of patients | Not assessed | |||
| Study design other than RCT | |||||
| Gregory | Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=448) | Exact count of AEs not provided | Of the 475 patients, 473 were satisfied or more than satisfied. (note: results in contradiction with the sample size reported in the methods, n=448) | ||
| Dirting et al | Belotero® Basic (n=114, with 109 completed treatment period, 35 completers of 36-week follow-up) | ||||
| % of patients with improvement in WSRS of ≥1 point: 100% after injection, 97% at 2 and 4 weeks, 91% at 12 weeks, and 81% at 24 weeks | Related AEs in 61% of patients | Not assessed | |||
| Kühne et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=317) | ||||
| Performance not formally assessed | Most common AEs: erythema, edema, ecchymosis (all of short duration, count not provided) | Not formally assessed | |||
| Downie et al | Belotero® Basic/Balance (n=93) | ||||
| WSRS: improvement at 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, and 24 weeks for both NLFs, according to investigator and independent rater. | Related AEs in 77.4% of patients; most frequent (>50% of patients): swelling, induration, and pain at injection site | Not assessed | |||
| Gilbert and Calvisi | Belotero® Balance (n=1), Restylane® + lidocaine (n =1), Perlane® + lidocaine (n=1), Juvéderm® Voluma/Volift/Volbella + lidocaine (n=3), Radiesse® (n=1) | ||||
| Discussion regarding the choice of each filler. Performance not reported | AE reported in four out of seven cases: minimal trauma (Juvéderm® Voluma + lidocaine n=1); minimal post-injection bleeding (Juvéderm® Volift + lidocaine n=1); moderate swelling (Restylane® + lidocaine n=1); moderate bruising with no vascular compromise (Radiesse®, n=1) No AE reported with Belotero® Balance and Juvéderm® Volbella + lidocaine | Not assessed | |||
| Goh et al | Belotero® Balance (n=5) and Restylane®-L (n =5) | ||||
| Belotero® Basic/Balance spread more widely in the tissue plane, compared to Restylane® | Only reported AE: edema, ~2 weeks after injection (Belotero® n=1; Restylane® n=1) | Not assessed | |||
| Hevia et al | Belotero® Balance (n=49, with 46 completers) | ||||
| Decrease in hollowness from baseline ( | Mild-to-moderate delayed swelling (n=4) at 2 weeks, which resolved within 2–10 months | Two-thirds of patients did not elect complimentary additional treatment at 6 months (but remained in the study for analysis) | |||
| Wollina | Belotero® Basic (n=21), Glytone® 3 (n=10), and Radiesse® (calcium hydroxyapatite, n=9) | ||||
| 100% of patients improved after the first procedure, two patients needed a touch-up | AEs in 25 out of 31 patients (80.6%) with HA fillers (Belotero® and Glytone® pooled): bruising (n=13), edema (n=6), and redness (n=6) | 38 out of 40 patients (95%) were very satisfied with HA fillers (data not provided for Belotero® alone) | |||
| Effect of lidocaine | |||||
| Moradi et al | Belotero® Balance (BEL, n=10), Belotero® Balance with lidocaine (BEL + lido, n=10), Belotero® Balance with lidocaine + epinephrine (BEL + lido + epi, n=10) | ||||
| Not assessed | Most common AEs: bruising and pain | Not assessed | |||
| Prager and Micheels | Belotero® Basic/Balance with/without lidocaine (n=29), blanching technique used in 21 patients (72%) | ||||
| Physician’s experience: Belotero® with/without lidocaine similar in terms of ejection force, texture, and placement | Pain reported in 20 out of 29 patients, with lower mean pain intensity with lidocaine than without lidocaine (2.8±1.1 vs 5.8±2.1, | Patient-assessed satisfaction (n=21): 21 patients (100%) were satisfied | |||
| Study design other than RCT | |||||
| Succi et al | Mesolis® Plus (n=20, with 18 completers) | ||||
| Investigator #1: 52.6% of patients showed 25% improvement; Investigators #2 and #3: ~60% of patients had a 25% or 50% improvement | Mild pain during injection in ~80% of patients; one case of severe pain (during the first session). Injection-site AEs: edema (80% of all sessions, lasting for 6 days on average), hematoma (in 76% of patients, lasting for | Patient’s satisfaction (from 0 –worst to 10 – best): mean score of 5.9 (range: 0 in 1 patient to 8 in 4 patients) | |||
| Bezzola and Micheels | Esthélis® Basic (n=25) and Soft (n=11) | ||||
| Soft: performance not formally assessed | No formal count of AEs | Not assessed | |||
| Micheels | Esthélis® Basic and Soft (n=13, out of the 36 included in the pilot study) | ||||
| Not assessed | AEs: rare bruises, erythema (≤24 hours), very light swelling (≤24 hours) (exact count of AEs not provided) | Not assessed | |||
| Hasson and Romero | Esthélis® Basic or Soft (n=12) | ||||
| Esthetic improvement rated by the investigator as moderate (27%), good (57%), or excellent (17%) immediately, | Mild or moderate pain during injection | Not assessed | |||
| Pavicic et al | Belotero® (Soft/Basic/Intense) after Bocouture® (botulinum toxin) and Radiesse® (calcium hydroxyapatite)/[Bocouture® + Radiesse®] + Belotero® Soft, Basic, and Intense (Patient A), Belotero® Basic and Intense (Patient B), or Belotero® Soft and Basic (Patient C) | ||||
| At 11–14 days after last treatment, improvement of ≥1 point: nine out of eleven sites (82%) in Patients A and C, ten out of eleven sites (91%) in Patient B | Procedure well tolerated (detailed safety results not provided) | Not formally assessed | |||
| RCT with comparator(s) | |||||
| Buntrock et al | Belotero® Intense vs Perlane® (n=20) | ||||
| WSRS (blinded investigator): decrease between baseline (4.0) and week 2 (Belotero® 2.1 vs Perlane® 2.4), week 24 (2.4 and 2.7), and week 48 (2.7 and 2.8) ( | Pain after injection lower with Belotero® than Perlane® (3.9 vs 5.0, | % of patients satisfied higher with Belotero® than Perlane® at week 24 (62% vs 51%, | |||
| Study design other than RCT | |||||
| Pavicic et al | Belotero® Basic and Belotero® Intense combined (n =2) | ||||
| Case 1: at 30 months, no facial lipoatrophy and no NLF visible (just lines) | Case 1: mild erythema but no edema, hematoma, or other AEs after first injection | Case 1: not reported | |||
| Case 2: 1 month after first injection, lipoatrophy at grade 0–1; 8 months later, loss of filling effect – second injection, 10 days later lipoatrophy grade 1; at 20 months, lipoatrophy grade 2–3 – third injection; at 26 months, lipoatrophy at grade 0 | Case 2: no AEs after the first injection, injection-site erythema after the second injection (resolved within 1 day). In both cases, no difference between the two fillers regarding pain and other AEs | Case 2: fully satisfied 1 month after first injection and 10 days after second injection | |||
| Micheels | Fortélis® Extra (n=28, histology n=1) | ||||
| At 6 months, clinical improvement for all treated areas (not quantified) | Erythema and mild edema (n=1), translucent cord (n=1), overcorrection in the lip (n=1), slightly asymmetrical injection with a mild edema (n=1) | Two patients were not satisfied: injected volume too large in the lip (1.5 mL), injection slightly asymmetrical | |||
| Pavicic | Belotero® Intense alone (n=110) or combined with Belotero® Basic (sandwich procedure, n=39) | ||||
| WSRS improved after injection (3.98–2.28, | Results pooled for the 149 patients | Esthetic outcomes rated by physician as good/excellent in 83.3% of patients at 12 weeks. | |||
| Study design other than RCTs | |||||
| Micheels et al | Belotero® Volume (n=56) | ||||
| FVLS scores improved from moderate at baseline to mild at 6 months with improvements of 53%, 57%, and 74% for the cheeks (3.5–1.6), cheek bones (3.8–1.6), and tear trough (3.8–1.0), respectively | Only injection-site AEs | All investigators reported that the volumizing effect was similar to (50%) or better than (50%) other volumizers. Injections rated as easy/very easy (50%) or equivalent to other products (40%) | |||
| Becker et al | Modélis® Shape (n=10) | ||||
| MRI: HA volume +331% at 1 month ( | Slight erythema after injection n=2 (resolved in 2–3 days) | Patient’s satisfaction (QoL from 0 to 100): baseline 68.0±24.0, 12 months 83.5±7.4 (+15.5%, | |||
| Micheels et al | Modélis® Shape/Belotero® Volume (n=20, with eleven completers at month 18) | ||||
| Investigator’s FVLS: mean score 3.1 at baseline, 1.3 immediately after injection, 1.3–1.8 between month 1 and month 18 ( | Mild or moderate injection-site reaction (n=13 out of 20, 65%) Most frequent AEs on day 1: redness (n=5, 25%), pain (n=6, 30%), edema (n=3, 15%) Also transient bruising (n=1, 5%) and itching (n=1, 5%). Firmness (n=5, 25%), which resolved within 3 months | At month 12, 95% of patients were satisfied (ie, would repeat treatment) | |||
Notes:
Studies with the same superscript letter were conducted in the same patients (eg, RCT and extension study).“Not formally assessed” means the outcomes are mentioned in the publication but without supportive numerical data.
Abbreviations: AEs, adverse events; FVLS, Facial Volume Loss Scale; GAIS, Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale; HA, hyaluronic acid; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NLF, nasolabial fold; ns, not significant; QoL, quality of life; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SAEs, serious adverse events; VAS, visual analog scale; WSRS, Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale.
Figure 1Two-dimensional surface profiles before (black lines) and 4 weeks after treatment (gray lines) with Belotero® Basic and Restylane®.
Notes: Height (µm) on the vertical axis corresponds to wrinkle depth. It was calculated as the mean of 50 profile lines across the wrinkles of the target area, using the phase-shift rapid in vivo measurement of skin system. Adapted from Prager W, Steinkraus V. A prospective, rater-blind, randomized comparison of the effectiveness and tolerability of Belotero® Basic versus Restylane® for correction of nasolabial folds. Eur J Dermatol. 2010;20(6):748–752.9
Figure 2Change in nasolabial fold severity with Belotero® Basic/Balance treatment, re-treatment, and optional touch-ups.
Notes: In Prager et al’s study,37 fold severity was rated using the Merz Aesthetics Scales at baseline and at 1, 6, 9, and 12 months. In Narins et al’s study,35,36 fold severity was rated using the Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale at baseline and at 24, 32, 48, 72, and 96 weeks. Baseline is before the injection. Data from Narins et al,35 Narins et al,36 and Prager et al.37
Abbreviation: t-u, touch-up allowed.
Figure 3Esthetic effect of Belotero® Soft.
Notes: A 30-year-old female patient with congenital unilateral (left) upper eyelid hollowness received 0.2 mL of Belotero® Soft in the suborbicularis fibroadipose tissue (pre-septal) layer using a blunt tip cannula to prevent bruising and intravascular injection. The product was spread as a thin layer to avoid swelling and lumps. Photo courtesy of AD Prasetyo.
Figure 4Long-term change in nasolabial fold severity with Belotero® Intense treatment based on the investigators’ rating on the Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale.
Notes: The difference from baseline was statistically significant at each time point, in both studies (P<0.001). The mean trend shows the average scores when pooling data from the two studies. In Buntrock et al’s study,19 the ratings were performed by a blinded investigator at baseline (ie, before injection) and at 2, 24, and 48 weeks. In Pavicic’s study,28 the ratings were performed by an unblinded investigator at baseline, immediately post-injection, and then at 2 and 12 weeks. In both studies, touch-ups were not allowed. Data from Buntrock et al.19 Adapted from Pavicic T. Efficacy and tolerability of a new monophasic, double-crosslinked hyaluronic acid filler for correction of deep lines and wrinkles. J Drugs Dermatol. 2011;10(2):134–139.28
Abbreviation: WSRS, Wrinkle Severity Rating Scale.
Figure 5Long-term change in facial volume loss (cheeks) with Belotero® Volume treatment based on the investigators’ rating on the Facial Volume Loss Scale.
Notes: The difference from baseline was tested by Micheels et al46 and was statistically significant at each time point (P<0.0001). The mean trend shows the average scores when pooling data from the two studies. In Micheels et al’s study,47 other facial areas than the cheeks were assessed. Only results for cheeks are presented here for comparison with Micheels et al.46 Assessments were performed at baseline, the day following the injection (ie, post-injection), and then at 1, 3, and 6 months. Touch-up at 1 month was performed in two out of 56 patients (3.6%).47 In Micheels et al’s study,46 assessments were performed at baseline, immediately post-injection, and then at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months, with an optional follow-up at 18 months (n=11). Touch-up was performed in two out of 20 patients (10%, timing not provided).46 Baseline is before the injection. Reproduced from Micheels P, Ascher B, Beilin G, Elias B, Rummaneethorn P, Sattler G. Evaluation clinique de l’efficacité et l’innocuité d’un acide hyaluronique volumateur de technologie CPM® pour le traitement de multiples zones du visage [Clinical evaluation of the efficacy and safety of a hyaluronic acid volumizer with CPM® technology for the treatment of multiple facial areas]. Réal Thér Dermato-Vénérol. 2014;235(3):2–8. French.47 Micheels P, Vandeputte J, Kravtsov M. Treatment of age-related midface atrophy by injection of cohesive polydensified matrix hyaluronic acid volumizer. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2015;8(3):28–34.46 Copyright ©2015 Matrix Medical Communications. All rights reserved.46
Abbreviations: FVLS, Facial Volume Loss Scale; t-u, touch-up allowed.