It is indeed a promising field of research, however it is unlikely to arrive to LL soon because...
1) Normal skin has fibroblast cells that lay collagen in a complex lattice form. During scarring, the same cells lay collagen in a simple parallel form. This is faster, and allows blood to clot quickly. As with any major operation, during LL, significant blood loss occurs, and scarring is essential for you to stop losing more blood and prevent infection. You're going to have to apply mechanical force and wait weeks for your incisions to close with Verteporfin, which is simply not feasible after a major blood-losing surgery. It may be possible to do this as a follow-up cosmetic procedure, but that really isn't a LL surgeon's job or specialty.
2) There is no scarring of your soft tissues during LL. Nerves and muscles are not touched. Only bones, skin, and ITB are damaged. Your bones and ITB will regenerate with identical tissues eventually, so no permanent scarring. Your muscles and tendons need to be stretched, which merely realigns existing fibers, so no scarring. Unless you injured yourself during LL, there should be no scarring except for the skin.