Domestic and International Cosmetic Tourism Complications Presenting to a U.S. Tertiary Hospital

Aesthet Surg J. 2024 May 15:sjae112. doi: 10.1093/asj/sjae112. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Cosmetic surgery tourism has become a significant global industry. Oftentimes, patients who develop postoperative complications present for care in their home U.S. state.

Objectives: This study evaluated patients who either traveled abroad or to other states within the United States for cosmetic surgeries and returned with complications treated in the authors' center. We sought to compare rates of complications between patients that underwent cosmetic surgery internationally and domestically.

Methods: This retrospective cross-sectional study reviewed patients who presented from June 2014 to June 2022 with concerns related to cosmetic surgeries performed in another state or abroad. Binary logistic regressions were performed to assess differences in outcomes between domestic and international cases, including complications, interventions, and admissions.

Results: One-hundred twenty-three patients (97.6% female, me an age 34.0 ± 8.7 years, range 16-62 years) comprised 159 emergency department consultations. The most common procedures included abdominoplasty (n=72) and liposuction (n=56). Complications included wound dehiscence (n=39), infection (n=38), and seroma (n=34). Over one-half of patients required intervention. Twenty-nine patients (23.6%) required hospital admission. On multivariate regression analyses, incidence of seroma (p=0.025) and oral (p=0.036) and intravenous antibiotic prescriptions (p=0.045) were significantly greater among the international cohort compared to domestic, whereas all other complication variables were non-significant. There were no other significant differences in operative interventions or hospital admissions between international and domestic cohorts.

Conclusions: Compared to domestic tourism cases, international tourism cases were associated with significantly higher rates of seroma formation and antibiotic use. There were no significant differences otherwise in overall complications including infections, operative interventions, or hospital admissions.