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Turn down the androgens to treat female pattern hair loss


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE AAD SUMMER ACADEMY 2015

References

NEW YORK – Antiandrogen hormones can help stabilize, and even improve, female pattern hair loss.

The pathophysiology of the disorder is unknown, but treatment is based on the assumption that women must be like men, at least when it comes to losing their hair. Intuitively, decreasing androgens should help correct the problem.

R Eko Bintoro/ThinkStockPhotos

The answer, though, is a complicated mix of yes and maybe, Dr. Rochelle Torgerson said at the American Academy of Dermatology summer meeting.

“It used to be assumed that pattern hair loss in women was just the same as it is in men,” said Dr. Torgerson of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “Now there is some evidence that’s not true. In 2010, for example, this was seen in a woman with complete androgen insensitivity syndrome, so in her, androgens were not affecting hair follicles. There must be a place for estrogen.”

Further complicating the picture is the fact that no hormonal medications have FDA approval for hair loss in women, and their use has a history of conflicting data in clinical studies. Still, they remain the cornerstone for treating this physically and emotionally challenging problem.

The initial challenge is simply what to label it at the first visit.

“I have no problem with term ‘androgenetic alopecia,’ since that is what women are seeing when they first look on the Internet for information. But I do try to transition them to ‘female pattern hair loss.’ And I never – ever – use the term ‘male pattern baldness.’ It has a huge impact on women.”

The disease is a progressive miniaturization of the hair follicle over time. The growing cycle slows and the resting phase lengthens. There is progressive thinning over the vertex. Some women may keep most of their frontal hairline, but the vast majority do say it’s thinner than it was.

Spironolactone and oral contraceptives with spironolactone analogues are Dr. Torgerson’s go-to medications for first-line treatment. For spironolactone, she prefers a dose of 100-200 mg/day. Some women experience gastrointestinal upset, dizziness, cramps, breast tenderness, and spotting with these medications.

Her choice for an oral contraceptive is the combination of 20 mcg ethinyl estradiol plus drospirenone, but any oral contraceptive approved for acne may work.

Finasteride and dutasteride are approved for pattern hair loss in men, but not in women. Both inhibit 5 alpha-reductase type II. Dutasteride is more potent that finasteride and also inhibits type 1 alpha-reductase; both of these enzymes convert testosterone into the more potent dihydrotestosterone. The side-effect profile is more moderate than that of spironolactone, but both of the drugs have had mixed results in clinical trials.

One problem with the finasteride trials has been the variation in dosing. The least positive studies used the lowest dose of 1.25 mg. As the dosage increased to 2.5 mg and 5 mg, the benefit increased.

Despite her support for hormonal therapies, Dr. Torgerson doesn’t rely upon them alone – she supports them with the direct action of a 5% minoxidil foam. In addition to prescribing effective therapy, she urges women to actually be patient and to have realistic expectations.

Most women expect dramatic improvement in a short time. “I have no idea where that expectation comes from. This is a slow progressive condition. I agree with them that it’s completely unsexy to have the head of hair they do at that time. But if, in 3 years, they have this same head of hair, that’s going to be an amazing success. And once they have that expectation in their mind, they are usually happy with any other results that they see.”

Dr. Torgerson had no financial conflicts with regard to her presentation.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @Alz_Gal

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