PDRN.AI

Decoded skincare, from PDRN to K-beauty.

How We Test

PDRN.AI product reviews follow a documented testing methodology. This page describes that process — what we do, how long we do it, and what we measure.

Test design

  • One tester per product (baseline reviews): the same person uses the product across the full test period to control for skin type, climate, and routine variables
  • Multiple testers (comparison reviews): when ranking multiple products, we recruit 3-5 testers with different skin profiles
  • Controlled baseline routine: all testers maintain the same cleanser, moisturizer, and SPF during the test period — only the reviewed product changes
  • Half-face protocol where applicable: for serums and treatments, the product is applied to one side of the face only, with the other side serving as control

Test duration

  • Cleansers and toners: 4 weeks
  • Moisturizers and hydrators: 4 weeks
  • Active serums (vitamin C, niacinamide): 6 weeks
  • Retinoids: 12 weeks minimum
  • PDRN and regenerative ingredients: 8-12 weeks (the mechanism is slow; shorter tests miss the effect)
  • Sunscreens: 2 weeks plus a stress test (high-UV exposure day with documented application)

What we document

  • Baseline photographs: consistent lighting, no makeup, taken at the same time of day
  • Weekly photos at the same conditions
  • Symptom log: stinging, dryness, breakouts, flushing, perceived effect
  • Texture measurements: where relevant (texture-focused products like exfoliants)
  • Routine compatibility: what other products it played well with, what caused conflicts

What we don’t do

  • Clinical instrumentation — we don’t have corneometers, sebumeters, or VISIA imaging. Our reviews are observational, not clinical.
  • Long-term efficacy claims beyond test period — we don’t claim a product will deliver six-month results from a six-week test
  • Comparisons across skin types we don’t have testers for — if all our testers have normal-combination skin, we note that limitation when relevant

Conflicts of interest

Most products we review are purchased at retail. Some are sent as press samples — when they are, we note it. Receiving a sample does not guarantee a positive review.

Where evidence is limited

For ingredients with thin clinical evidence (new molecules, novel delivery systems), we say so explicitly. Absence of evidence isn’t evidence of absence — but it’s also not a free pass to claim efficacy.

Questions

Methodology questions or suggestions: hello@pdrn.ai