DOI: 10.1093/asjof/ojag135 ISSN: 2631-4797

Three-Dimensional Morphometric Trajectories Following Lip Lift With or Without Fat Grafting in Facial Feminization Patients

Victoria Kong, Andrew Salib, Martin Kauke-Navarro, Emily Parker, Jake Moscarelli, Omar Allam, Samira Glaeser-Khan, Samuel Knoedler, Michael Alperovich

Abstract

Background

Subnasal lip lifts address perioral aging, but long-term quantitative data on postoperative changes and permanence remain limited.

Objectives

To provide the first three-dimensional (3D) evaluation of morphometric changes after subnasal lip lift ± autologous fat grafting over time.

Methods

A retrospective cohort (2022–2025) of facial feminization patients undergoing subnasal lip lift ± fat grafting was analyzed. Standardized VECTRA 3D imaging measured philtral height, vermilion height and width, nasal base width, columella-labial angle, surface area, and lip volume preoperatively and at serial postoperative intervals. Early changes (3 months) were compared using t-tests, and longitudinal trajectories with linear mixed-effects models.

Results

40 patients were included (lip lift alone, n=10; lip lift + fat grafting, n=30). Both cohorts showed significant early philtral shortening (–2.92 ± 1.53 mm, p= 0.013 vs –5.95 ± 1.77 mm, p<0.001) and increased upper vermilion surface area (1.40 ± 0.86 cm2, p=0.022 vs 1.42 ± 1.23 cm2, p=0.022). Fat grafting produced greater early volumetric augmentation (1.18 ± 0.86 cc vs 0.53 ± 0.25 cc), though between-group differences did not reach statistical significance. Mixed-effects modeling showed significant divergence in permanence. Philtral shortening showed 43% retention by 24 months (p=0.003), whereas volumetric and surface area gains approached zero by 22 and 24 months, respectively.

Conclusions

There is measurable philtral shortening after subnasal lip lift. However, partial re-lengthening occurs over time. Additionally, early gains in vermilion display and lip volume decrease substantially by two years. Fat grafting enhances early augmentation but shows limited long-term retention.

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