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Evidence-based review: Screening body dysmorphic disorder in aesthetic clinical settings
Authors:Ines Novo Pereira LMD  MSc  Rashmi Chattopadhyay BChD  MFDSRCPS  MSc  Sean Fitzpatrick MD  MSc  Sheila Nguyen BSc  BDS  MSc  Haidar Hassan DDS  FDSRCS  MSc  PhD
Institution:1. Faculty of Dental Medicine, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal;2. Barts & The London School of Medicine & Dentistry, Centre for Cutaneous Research, Blizard Institute of Cell and Molecular Science, Queen Mary University, London, UK
Abstract:

Background

Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a psychiatric disturbance with high incidence in aesthetic clinical settings. Early recognition may avoid unnecessary elective procedures with ethical and medicolegal consequences.

Aims

To identify validated BDD screening tools and critically appraise current literature regarding its implementation and efficacy in aesthetic medicine and surgery scenarios, with the purpose of transposing the findings to the broad clinical settings in the field.

Methods

Data was collected using advanced search from PubMed (MEDLINE). Having satisfied the search parameters, 12 studies referring BDD definition according to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-5) criteria and including a BDD screening tool in clinical aesthetic settings were selected.

Results

While BDD screening enables the recognition of at-risk individuals, further work is required to uncover the best screening tool for general aesthetic clinical practice. Level III evidence favored BDD Questionnaire (BDDQ)/BDDQ-Dermatology Version (DV), and The Dysmorphic Concern Questionnaire (DCQ) among the limited available validated screening instruments to be used outside the psychiatric environment. Based on level II self-classification, one study selected BDDQ-Aesthetic Surgery (AS) version for rhinoplasty patients. The validation process of both BDDQ-AS and Cosmetic Procedure Screening Questionnaire (COPS) had limitations. For BDD screening potential in avoiding postoperative complications, the limited studies found evaluating the outcomes following aesthetic treatments using validated BDD screening measures showed a trend toward less satisfaction with aesthetic treatment outcome among positive screening population against non-BDD counterparts.

Conclusion

Further research is necessary to establish more effective methods to identify BDD and evaluate the impact of positive findings on aesthetic intervention outcomes. Future studies may elucidate which BDD characteristics best predict a favorable outcome and provide high-quality evidence for standardized protocols in research and clinical practice.
Keywords:aesthetics  body dysmorphic disorder  evidence-based review  screening
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