Chronic Telogen Effluvium: Potential Complication for Clinical Trials in Female Androgenetic Alopecia?

    Steven Rand
    Image of study
    TLDR CTE can distort results in hair growth trials, so exclude it carefully.
    Chronic telogen effluvium (CTE) is a diffuse hair thinning condition that can be mistaken for mild to moderate female androgenetic alopecia (AGA). CTE can complicate the diagnosis of milder forms of female AGA and has potentially serious implications for investigations of new hair growth agents. The erroneous inclusion of a few or more subjects with CTE, in a study population thought to consist entirely of female AGA, may be enough to distort the clinical response/efficacy results and the perceived benefit of a therapeutic/investigational agent. Therefore, subjects with CTE, alone and in combination with female AGA, should be carefully excluded from therapeutic trials involving female AGA. Obtaining a 4 mm punch biopsy specimen for horizontal sectioning for each subject about to enter a study of female AGA may make good sense.
    Discuss this study in the Community →

    Research cited in this study

    3 / 3 results

    Related Community Posts Join

    6 / 432 results

      community C’est terrible - at my wits end

      in Female  450 upvotes 2 years ago
      A 29-year-old woman is experiencing gradual hair thinning since age 15, suspects Androgenic Alopecia, and has tried 5% minoxidil with little success. She has purchased various hair loss treatments including minoxidil, dutasteride, finasteride, and spironolactone, but is cautious about starting them due to potential interactions with her ADHD medication.

      community is there anything that stops hair loss?

      in Female  8 upvotes 1 year ago
      A user is experiencing rapid hair loss and has been diagnosed with telogen effluvium by multiple dermatologists, but doubts the diagnosis due to the severity and speed of the hair loss. They are considering various treatments like spironolactone, estradiol, and possibly finasteride, while also exploring the possibility of hormonal imbalances or autoimmune issues.

      community My Theory Of Androgenic Alopecia

      in Research/Science  19 upvotes 4 months ago
      Hair loss is linked to cellular physiology and the IGF-1 to TGF-B1 ratio, not just androgen sensitivity. The theory lacks evidence, while finasteride and minoxidil are effective treatments.

    Related Research

    1 / 1 results