| Literature DB >> 27747798 |
Magdalena M Watras1, Jignesh P Patel2,3, Roopen Arya2.
Abstract
Hair loss is associated with the anticoagulants heparin and warfarin. With the recent availability of direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) it is of clinical interest to know if they are implicated with hair loss and/or whether they could be successfully prescribed for patients who suffer from coumarin- or heparin-related alopecia. Initially reports of heparin- and coumarin-associated alopecia available through PubMed and Medline were explored in order to establish the cause of this side effect. Currently there is a lack of unanimity on why anticoagulants cause alopecia. However, timing and presentation strongly suggest that telogen effluvium is part of the process. The observation that both heparins and coumarins cause a similar pattern of hair loss suggests a shared mechanism related to anticoagulant activity. To date, the World Health Organization has received 405 reports of DOAC-associated alopecia through their pharmacovigilance database VigiBase®. Additionally, real world registry data describes an alopecia incidence of 4.4 per 100 patient years in patients prescribed rivaroxaban and dabigatran. Further widespread clinical experience is required to ascertain if this is true, but early indications suggest that DOACs are implicated in hair loss and will not provide a suitable alternative for patients suffering from alopecia related to traditional anticoagulants.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27747798 PMCID: PMC4819463 DOI: 10.1007/s40801-015-0056-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Real World Outcomes ISSN: 2198-9788
Published case reports linking increase in hair loss with anticoagulants (presented in chronological order)
| Age (years) | Sex | Drug | Indication for anticoagulation | Treatment duration until report of hair loss | Year | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | F | Warfarin | Accidental ingestion | 2.5 weeks | 1957 | [ |
| 43 | M | Heparin | Thrombophebitis | 2 months | 1965 | [ |
| 6 | M | Warfarin | Chronic accidental ingestion | Unknown | 1965 | [ |
| 62 | F | Warfarin | Mitral valve replacement | 10 years | 1988 | [ |
| 55 | M | Warfarin | Aortic valve replacement | 13 years | 1988 | [ |
| 65 | F | Warfarin | Mitral valve replacement | 1.5 years | 1988 | [ |
| 35 | M | Warfarin | Aortic valve replacement | 5 years | 1993 | [ |
| 57 | F | Warfarin | Cardiogenic brain embolism | 2 months | 1995 | [ |
| 49 | F | Warfarin | Systemic lupus erythematosus | 2 months | 1995 | [ |
| 9 | F | Dalteparin | Sinus venous thrombosis | 2.5 months | 2000 | [ |
| 62 | M | Acenocoumarol | Post MI to prevent aneurysm | 2 months | 2000 | [ |
| 65 | M | Acenocoumarol | Cardioembolic stroke | 2 months | 2000 | [ |
| 60 | F | Acenocoumarol | Valve prosthesis | 16 months | 2000 | [ |
| 69 | F | Dalteparin | Prevention of extracorporeal clotting in haemodialysis | 1.5–3 months | 2001 | [ |
| 75 | F | Dalteparin | Prevention of extracorporeal clotting in haemodialysis | 1.5–3 months | 2001 | [ |
| 59 | F | Dalteparin | Prevention of extracorporeal clotting in haemodialysis | 1.5–3 months | 2001 | [ |
| 74 | F | Dalteparin | Prevention of extracorporeal clotting in haemodialysis | 1.5–3 months | 2001 | [ |
| 66 | M | Tinzaparin | Prevention of extracorporeal clotting in haemodialysis | 3 months | 2003 | [ |
| 34 | F | Enoxaparin for 3 weeks then warfarin | Cerebral venous thrombosis | 3 weeks from treatment start | 2006 | [ |
| 22 | F | Enoxaparin for 3 weeks then warfarin | Cerebral venous thrombosis | 3 weeks from treatment start | 2006 | [ |
| 52 | F | Enoxaparin for 3 weeks then warfarin | Cerebral venous thrombosis | 3 weeks from treatment start | 2006 | [ |
| 70 | F | Warfarin | Deep vein thrombosis | “soon’’ | 2008 | [ |
| 25 | M | Warfarin | Pulmonary embolism | 1 month | 2010 | [ |
| Traditional anticoagulants are known to cause hair loss and the mechanism is likely to be related to their therapeutic activity. |
| Early experience with direct oral anticoagulants suggests that they are also implicated in this side effect and therefore do not offer an alternative to patients experiencing alopecia due to treatment with coumarins or heparins. |