Total Body Photography (TBP)
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
The IntelliStudio brings cutting-edge automated total body mapping technology and Artificial Intelligence to Pacific Melanoma & Skin Cancer Clinic at St Leonards.
The IntelliStudio brings cutting-edge automated total body mapping technology and Artificial Intelligence
This state-of-the-art equipment combines high powered full-body photography, sequential digital dermatoscopy imaging and artificial intelligence. It is recommended by key worldwide skin cancer specialists for monitoring high-risk patients so it is very fitting that it should be readily available at St Leonards
Using a 50-megapixel camera with 400 times magnification and artificial intelligence, the IntelliStudio will help us document your entire skin and track changes to individual skin spots over time so we can detect skin cancers as soon as possible and help save lives when it comes to melanomas.
Over 1700 Australians die each year from melanoma. However, melanoma is nearly always curable if detected early!
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Who should have Total Body Photography?
Living under the harsh Australian sun, your risk of melanoma is much greater than elsewhere in the world. This is especially true if you have more than 100 moles, have already had a melanoma or have 2 or more close relatives (parents, siblings, or children) who have had melanoma. Experts advise that people in these high-risk groups benefit from total body photography for early melanoma detection.
Please bear in mind that the photographs are an aid to medical follow-up, not a replacement.
2. What happens during the IntelliStudio photographic session?
- The photographic session takes 15 to 20 minutes.
- A controlled studio environment is used to take all the body photographs.
- Normal photographic lighting is used and there is no harmful lighting or any X-rays used.
3. Will my privacy be respected?
- Maximum client privacy is ensured at all stages.
- You do not need to remove your underwear. To maximise the quality of the photographs, we suggest that underwear is a neutral colour (preferably grey or skin toned) and of a brief style leaving as much skin surface exposed as possible.



