Diabetes mellitus affects an estimated 589 million adults globally, and cutaneous manifestations occur in up to 70% of affected individuals during the course of the disease. The objective of this narrative review is to examine the intersection of diabetes mellitus, skin aging, cosmetic dermatologic procedures, and regenerative therapies, with an emphasis on evidence-based best practices and clinical considerations. While the impaired wound healing associated with diabetes has been extensively studied, the aesthetic implications of diabetic skin disease remain comparatively underexplored. Individuals with diabetes frequently exhibit features of accelerated cutaneous aging, including premature wrinkling, dyschromia, xerosis, alopecia, and other cosmetically significant dermatoses that may negatively impact quality of life. In parallel, the demand for aesthetic dermatologic procedures among patients with diabetes has increased substantially; however, evidence-based recommendations guiding the safe and effective use of cosmetic interventions in this population remain limited. Diabetic skin demonstrates accelerated biological aging driven by complex pathophysiological mechanisms, including the accumulation of advanced glycation end products, chronic low-grade inflammation, oxidative stress, microvascular dysfunction, and neuropathy. These processes partially overlap with chronological aging and photoaging but are mechanistically distinct and may influence tissue repair, inflammatory responses, and the safety profile of commonly performed aesthetic procedures such as chemical peels, laser resurfacing, dermal fillers, neuromodulators, and microneedling. Emerging regenerative approaches, including platelet-rich plasma, platelet lysate, and mesenchymal stromal cell-derived products such as exosomes and secretomes, have attracted increasing attention as biologically targeted strategies for cutaneous rejuvenation. Nevertheless, clinical evidence specifically addressing aesthetic interventions in diabetic populations remains limited. A diabetes-informed approach to aesthetic dermatology that considers metabolic status, procedure selection, and post-procedural monitoring is therefore essential to optimize safety and therapeutic outcomes.
Odeh et al. (Tue,) studied this question.