Clinical Use of Infrared Thermography: Where Are We and Where Are We Going
Agnieszka Wnuk-Scardaccione, Jan BilskiMedical infrared thermography, which involves the use of infrared thermal cameras for the non-invasive assessment of skin surface temperature distribution, has gained increasing interest in recent years as a tool supporting diagnosis and treatment monitoring. The aim of this article is to present the historical background and critically reassess the current role of infrared thermography in medicine, with particular emphasis on standardization as a key determinant of its clinical utility. This Perspective highlights the fundamental impact of methodological variability on diagnostic performance and reproducibility. A structured framework for standardization is proposed, encompassing patient preparation, environmental conditions, device parameters and calibration, image acquisition protocols, region-of-interest definition and analysis, as well as reporting and clinical interpretation. The analysis demonstrates how inconsistencies at each of these levels reduce measurement reliability, limit inter-study comparability, and weaken clinical confidence in infrared thermography. The article also addresses the growing availability of mobile thermal imaging systems and their integration with artificial intelligence, while emphasizing the need for stronger evidence-based support across all methodological domains. The presented analysis suggests that, despite existing limitations, medical infrared thermography holds considerable potential as a supportive clinical tool. However, its broader clinical implementation remains limited by several factors, with the lack of standardized protocols constituting a major and practically addressable translational barrier. Wider adoption will require standardization efforts alongside rigorous validation studies and application-specific interpretative guidelines. Addressing these challenges through technological advances and coordinated international standardization may facilitate meaningful progress over the next decade.