Five‐year efficacy of finasteride in 801 Japanese men with androgenetic alopecia |
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Authors: | Toshihiro Yoshitake Akira Takeda Kensaku Ohki Yuko Inoue Takanori Yamawaki Saori Otsuka Minekatsu Akimoto Mitsuru Nemoto Yasuhito Shimakura Akio Sato |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Regenerative Plastic Surgery, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan;2. Department of Plastic and Aesthetic Surgery, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan;3. Tokyo Memorial Clinic Hirayama, Tokyo, Japan |
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Abstract: | Finasteride is standard medical treatment for androgenetic alopecia; however, no large studies with 5 years or more of follow up have been performed in Japan. The authors followed Japanese men with androgenetic alopecia treated with finasteride for 5 years to evaluate long‐term treatment efficacy. Of 903 men treated with finasteride (1 mg/day), 801 patients were evaluated over 5 years by modified global photographic assessment. Although the proportion of improvement was high (99.4%), modified global photographic assessment scores after 5 years of treatment were lower in patients with more advanced disease as measured by the modified Norwood–Hamilton scale. After separating patients into “sufficient” and “insufficient” efficacy groups according to the modified global photographic assessment score after 5 years (scores ≥6 and <6, respectively), multivariate analysis showed that independent risk factors of insufficient efficacy were age at start of treatment of 40 years or more (P = 0.021) and classification on the modified Norwood–Hamilton scale (P < 0.001), whereas presence of stress at start of treatment was a negative predictor (P = 0.025). In conclusion, continuous finasteride treatment for 5 years improved androgenetic alopecia with sustained effect among Japanese. Younger age and less advanced disease at start of treatment were the key predictors of higher finasteride efficacy. |
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Keywords: | androgenetic alopecia finasteride Japanese modified global photographic assessment modified Norwood– Hamilton scale |
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