Abstract Background Resident-run clinics (RRCs) have become an important component of plastic surgery training. This study evaluates outcomes from a longitudinal RRC focused on neuromodulator and soft tissue filler injections over a 5 year period. Objectives To assess clinical outcomes, patient retention, resident experience by PGY level, and the safety of RRCs as a training model. Methods A retrospective review of patients seen in our institution’s RRC from January 2020 to September 2024 was performed. Variables included demographics, injectable type and anatomic location, revision rate (overall and by PGY), complication rate, patient retention, and surgical conversion. Results A total of 380 patients (92.1% female, mean age 41) accounted for 1,168 encounters (mean 3.3 visits/patient). Thirty-seven residents participated during the study period. Neuromodulator, filler, and combined treatments comprised 55.3%, 20.9%, and 23.7% of encounters, respectively. Corrugators (91%) and lips (74%) were the most common neuromodulator and filler sites. The overall complication rate was 0.17% (infection and eyebrow ptosis) and revision rate was 5.2%, most commonly due to perceived ineffectiveness (58.7%) or asymmetry (38.1%). Revision rates decreased with advancing PGY (PGY-1: 9.0% vs. PGY-6: 3.0%). Sixty-five percent of patients returned for at least one subsequent visit, and 5.5% later scheduled surgery with a resident or attending. Conclusions Nonsurgical RRCs provide a safe, effective training environment for progressive autonomy in aesthetic injectables while maintaining low complication and revision rates comparable to other practice settings.
Somers et al. (Mon,) studied this question.