| Literature DB >> 35199047 |
Yuliya Lytvyn1, Katherine McDonald2, Asfandyar Mufti2, Jennifer Beecker3,4,5,6.
Abstract
Over 1 million isotretinoin prescriptions are authorized in the United States per year. An insight into the frequency, dose dependency, timing, and reversibility of hair loss associated with isotretinoin treatment for acne vulgaris could help guide dosing regimens and patient counseling. The objective of this systematic review was to assess the frequency of hair loss in patients with acne vulgaris on <0.5 mg/kg/d daily doses of isotretinoin versus the frequency of hair loss in patients with acne vulgaris on ≥0.5 mg/kg/d daily doses of isotretinoin. An Embase and MEDLINE search was conducted on July 15, 2020, in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. The review focused on acne vulgaris patients. The treatment of acne vulgaris is the most common use of isotretinoin, and the population is typically younger and with fewer comorbidities. Twenty-two studies reported hair loss with oral isotretinoin treatment. A frequency analysis suggested that patients with acne vulgaris on <0.5 mg/kg/d of isotretinoin experienced hair loss at a frequency of 3.2% (n = 18/565) compared with those on ≥0.5 mg/kg/d, who experienced hair loss at a frequency of 5.7% (n = 192/3375). Inferential statistics were not possible. Physicians should consider counseling patients about the risk of telogen effluvium prior to drug initiation, as is commonly done for other side effects. The potential trend of increased hair loss frequency at a higher daily dosing warrants further investigation using higher-quality research.Entities:
Keywords: Accutane; Clarus; Epuris; alopecia; hair loss; hair shedding; hair thinning; high dose; isotretinoin; low dose; telogen effluvium
Year: 2022 PMID: 35199047 PMCID: PMC8841364 DOI: 10.1016/j.jdin.2022.01.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAAD Int ISSN: 2666-3287
Fig 1Flow diagram of literature screening using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines.
Figure adapted from http://prisma-statement.org.
∗Original articles written in English were included if they involved study population of interest (ie, human patients), involved the use of isotretinoin, or had an observational (ie, case reports, case series, and cross-sectional or cohort studies) or experimental (ie, randomized controlled trials) study design.
Summary of reported hair loss with <0.5 mg/kg/d and ≥0.5 mg/kg/d daily doses of oral isotretinoin in patients with acne vulgaris
| Study characteristics | Patient demographics | Isotretinoin information | Hair loss diagnosis and prognosis | Other side effects (frequency) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sources | Study design (evidence level) | Sample size (n) | Age (y) / sex | Comorbidities | Concomitant medications (dose and frequency) | Dose and duration | Number of patients reporting hair loss or thinning (%) | Time of onset | Measurement of hair loss | Reversibility (time) | Isotretinoin discontinuation due to hair loss | |
| Agarwal et al (2011) | Prospective randomized study (1b) | 27 | 19.2 / 59% M | Acne vulgaris (mild n = 9, moderate n = 9, severe n = 9) | Treated with azithromycin daily for the first 3 wk | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported | N/A | N/A | Cheilitis (100%), dry skin (92.6%), dry mouth (66.7%), dry eyes (37.0%), dry nose (25.9%), rashes or facial redness (29.6%), abnormal lipid profile (7.4%), abnormal liver function tests (3.7%) |
| 28 | 19.1 / 57% M | Acne vulgaris (mild n = 9, moderate n = 10, severe n = 9) | Treated with azithromycin daily for the first 3 wk | WBD: 1 mg/kg/2 d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported | N/A | N/A | Cheilitis (92.9%), dry skin (78.6%), dry mouth (28.6%), rashes or facial redness (25.0%), abnormal lipid profile (3.5%) | ||
| 28 | 19.4 / 36% M | Acne vulgaris (mild n = 9, moderate n = 9, severe n = 10) | Treated with azithromycin daily for the first 3 wk | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d for 1 wk every 4 wk | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported | N/A | N/A | Cheilitis (78.6%), dry skin (71.4%), dry mouth (17.9%), dry eyes (10.7%), dry nose (10.7%), rashes or facial redness (25.0%) | ||
| 29 | 18 / 55% M | Acne vulgaris (mild n = 10, moderate n = 10, severe n = 9) | Treated with azithromycin daily for the first 3 wk | Fixed: 20 mg/2 d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported | N/A | N/A | Cheilitis (89.7%), dry skin (79.3%), dry mouth (20.9%), rashes or facial redness (17.2%) | ||
| Faghihi et al (2017) | Prospective randomized clinical trial (1b) | 36 | 22.9 / 13.9% M | Moderate and severe acne vulgaris | Treated with 250 mg of azithromycin daily for the first 2 wk as well as 0.25 mg of prednisolone in the first wk | WBD: 0.25 mg/kg/d | 2 (5.6%) | Exact time NR but noted at 6 mo F/U | Dermatologist-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Itching (11.1%), dry mouth (2.8%), dry nose (16.7%), dry eyes (11.1%), spontaneous skin damage (2.8%), skin redness (2.8%), palm and sole skin scaling (2.8%), skin photosensitivity (5.6%), nail damage (5.6%), eye photosensitivity (2.8%), joint pain (5.6%), GI effects (11.1%), headache (2.8%), depression (5.6%) |
| 30 | 23.1 / 26.7% M | Moderate and severe acne vulgaris | Treated with 250 mg of azithromycin daily for the first 2 wk as well as 0.25 mg of prednisolone in the first wk | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 7 (23.3%) | Exact time NR but noted at 6 mo F/U | Dermatologist-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Itching (20%), dry mouth (20%), dry nose (40%), repeated rhinorrhea (20%), dry eyes (20%), skin redness (13.3%), palm and sole skin scaling (3.3%), skin photosensitivity (20%), palm and sole burning (3.3%), nail damage (6.7%), poor night vision (10%), eye photosensitivity (6.7%), muscle pain (3.3%), joint pain (3.3%), GI effects (16.7%), headache (6.7%), fatigue (6.7%), depression (6.7%) | ||
| De and Kanwar (2011) | Preliminary, open-label, prospective, noncomparative, single-center study (1b) | 66 | 20.4 / 61% M | Grade 3 and 4 acne vulgaris (severe and nodulocystic) | Azithromycin (500 mg/d over 3 consecutive d for 2 wk) | WBD: 0.3 mg/kg/d | 2 (3.0%) | Exact time NR, noted at monthly F/Us | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Cheilitis (48.5%), xerosis (16.7%), erythema (6.1%), aphthae (3.0%), menstrual irregularities (1.5%), lipid profile abnormalities (1.5%) |
| Rao et al (2014) | Prospective, noncomparative study (1b) | 50 | 26.4 / 76% M | Moderate-to-severe acne vulgaris: Grade II (12%), grade III (56%), grade IV (32%) | NR | WBD: 0.3-0.4 mg/kg/d | 2 (4.0%) | Exact time NR, noted at 1 mo or 3 mo F/U | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Cheilitis (98%), Xerosis (84%), dandruff (12%), erythema of the face (8%), rough and dry hair (8%), dry mouth (6%), abnormal lipid levels (6%), abnormal liver enzyme levels (6%), rise in total cholesterol and serum triglycerides (6%), rise in liver enzymes (6%), headache (4%), vitiligo (2%) |
| Yap (2017) | Prospective (1b) | 150 | 26.6 / 48% M | Moderate (64.7%), severe (29.3%) and very severe (6%) acne | NR | Fixed: 10 mg/d | 2 (1.3%) | Exact time NR, noted at biweekly F/U | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Lip dryness (100%), xerosis (36%), eczema (4%), liver enzyme elevation (3.3%), lipid increase (2.7%), mood change (0.7%) |
| Dhaked et al (2016) | Randomized, comparative, prospective study (1b) | 118 | 19.0 / 83% M | Moderate-to-severe acne | NR | Fixed: 20 mg/d | 7 (5.9%) | Exact time NR, noted at biweekly F/U | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Cheilitis (97.5%), dry skin (16.9%), dry mouth (2.5%), dry eyes (7.6%), dry nose (3.4%), facial erythema (2.5%), pruritus (9.3%), urticaria (3.4%), headache (1.7%), oral aphthous (0.8%), menstrual irregularities (5%), arthralgia (0.8%), myalgia (1.7%), abnormal lipid profile (3.4%), abnormal liver function tests (2.5%), forgetfulness (0.8%) |
| 116 | 18.8 / 78% M | Moderate–to-severe acne | NR | Fixed: 20 mg/2 d | 3 (2.6%) | Exact time NR, noted at biweekly F/U | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Cheilitis (95.7%), dry skin (10.3%), dry mouth (1.7%), dry eyes (1.7%), dry nose (0.9%), facial erythema (2.6%), pruritus (4.3%), urticaria (2.6%), headache (0.9%), oral aphthous (0%), menstrual irregularities (8%), myalgia (1.7%), abnormal lipid profile (0.9%), abnormal liver function tests (0.9%), pigmentation of face (0.8%), dermographism (0.8%) | ||
| Kus et al (2005) | Investigator-blinded, randomized prospective study (1b) | 39 | 21.8 / 43.9% M | No significant systemic disease | NR | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d | 19 (48.7%) | Exact time NR, noted at 4, 8, 12, or 16 wk F/U | Patient-reported, hair loss was asked about among other side effects | NR | 0 (0%) | Facial erythema (74.4%), facial dryness (82.1%), desquamation of lips (100%), body dryness (76.9%), nasal crusting (82.1%), cheilitis (79.5%), eye irritation (20.5%), epistaxis (23.1%), bruising of skin (7.7%), pyogenic granuloma (7.7%), MS symptoms (43.6%), GI symptoms (15.4%), headache (25.6%) |
| 36 | 21.3 / 51.2% M | No significant systemic disease | Vitamin E (800 IU/d) | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d | 14 (38.9%) | Exact time NR, noted at 4, 8, 12, or 16 wk F/U | Patient-reported, hair loss was asked about among other side effects | NR | 0 (0%) | Facial erythema (83.3%), facial dryness (91.7%), desquamation of lips (100%), body dryness (91.7%), nasal crusting (86.1%), cheilitis (88.9%), eye irritation (33.3%), epistaxis (27.8%), pyogenic granuloma (8.3%), MS symptoms (41.7%), GI symptoms (19.4%), headache (16.7%) | ||
| Akman et al (2007) | Multicenter, controlled prospective study (1b) | 22 | 22.7 / 36.4% M | Moderate (grade 2) to severe (grade 3-4) acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported, hair loss was asked about among other side effects | N/A | N/A | Dryness in mouth (9%), dry chapped lips (73%), dry skin (59%), dry or irritated eyes (9%), pruritus (14%), rash or facial redness (5%), excessive thirst (9%) |
| 19 | 20.0 / 52.6% M | Moderate (grade 2) to severe (grade 3-4) acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported, hair loss was asked about among other side effects | N/A | N/A | Dryness in mouth (5%), dry chapped lips (95%), dry skin (65%), dry or irritated eyes (5%), dryness of other mucosal tissues (5%), pruritus (16%), rash or facial redness (32%), peeling of fingertip skin (11%), excessive thirst (21%) | ||
| 19 | 20.0 / 26.3% M | Moderate (grade 2) to severe (grade 3-4) acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | N/A | Patient-reported, hair loss was asked about among other side effects | N/A | N/A | Dryness in mouth (47%), dry chapped lips (100%), dry skin (78%), dry or irritated eyes (16%), dryness of other mucosal tissues (21%), pruritus (32%), rash or facial redness (47%), epistaxis (11%), peeling of fingertip skin (21%), fatigue (5%), excessive thirst (16%) | ||
| Burger et al (2014) | Cross-sectional/questionnaire (2b) | 57 | 20.2 / 57.9% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | Fixed: Average 44.2 mg/d | 13 (22.8%) | NR | Patient-reported | NR | NR | Dry lips (98.2%), dry skin (87.7%), initial acne flareup (63.2%), dry eyes (56.1%), epistaxis (54.4%), sunburn (52.6%), backache (43.9%), depression (42.1%), fatigue (42.1%), muscle pain (40.4%), dizziness (38.6%), headache (38.6%), slow healing wounds (38.6%), joint pain (38.6%), neck stiffness (31.6%), sudden urges to fall asleep (29.8%), constipation (29.8%), loss of appetite (24.6%), blurred vision (22.8%), anxiety (19.3%), ingrown nails (17.5%), weight loss (17.5%) |
| Brito et al (2010) | Prospective study (1b) | 150 | Range: 15-32 / 52% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.5-1 mg/kg/d | 34 (22.7%) | Exact time NR, noted at 1 mo and at every 3 mo thereafter at F/U | Patient-reported | NR | NR | Cheilitis (94%), xeroderma (47.3%), dryness of mucosae (46.7%), palmoplantar scaling (20.7%), epistaxis (21.3%), blepharoconjunctivitis (32%), nail fragility (25.3%), pyogenic granuloma (13.3%), pyodermitis (19.3%), flareups (6%), osteomuscular pain (11.3%), headache (9.3%), hearing complaints (1.3%), tachycardia (0.7%) |
| Gorpelioglu et al (2010) | Prospective study (1b) | 40 | 25 / 12% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.5-1 mg/kg/d | 1 (2.5%) | Exact time NR, noted at monthly F/U | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Dry mouth (75%), epistaxis (40%), dry chapped lips (57.5%), dry skin (52.5%), dry or irritated eyes (22.5%), dryness of other mucosal tissues (20%), pruritus (17.5%), rash or facial redness (12.5%), peeling of fingertip skin (7.5%), fatigue (10%), bone or joint ache and pain (5%), muscular cramps or pain (7.5%), excessive thirst (10%) |
| Entezari-Maleki et al (2011) | Cross-sectional (2b) | 239 | 24.5 / 19% M | Otherwise healthy | NR | WBD: Average 0.53/kg/d | 18 (7.5%) | NR | Patient-reported | NR | NR | Dry lip (90%), dry skin (40%), increased cholesterol (24.2%), increased triglyceride (22.7%), increased LDL (18.3%), dry eye (15%), increased fasting blood sugar (10.8%), skin patch (8.5%), fatigue (7.5%), blurred vision (7.5%), dry nose (6.2%), epistaxis (5.5%), nervousness (5.5%), headache (5%), back pain (4.5%), arthralgia (4%), erythema (3.8%), xerostomia (3.3%), myalgia (3%), itching (2.5%), skin sensitiveness (2.5%), dry hair (2.5%), rash (2.5%), drowsiness (2.5%), worseness of acne (2.5%), muscle weakness (2%), eye pain (1.6%), bone pain (1.6%), weight loss (1.6%), thinning of hair (1.25%), thinning of skin (1.25%), eczema (1.25%), depressed mood (1.25%), insomnia (1.25%), weakness (1.25%), gastric pain (1.2%), skin darkness (0.8%), flushing (0.8%), skin wound (0.8%), photophobia (0.8%), loss of vision at night (0.8%), menstrual dysfunction (0.8%), nausea (0.8%), abdominal pain (0.8%), constipation (0.8%), thirst (0.8%), chest pain (0.8%), GI cramping (0.8%), kidney and bladder pain (0.4%), anorexia (0.4%), weight gain (0.4%), rhinorrhea (0.4%), dyspnea (0.4%), irritation of the throat (0.4%), dream abnormality (0.4%), gum bleeding (0.4%), skin spot (0.4%), conjunctivitis (0.4%), contact lens intolerance (0.4%), contact lens intolerance (0.4%), hair fragility (0.4%), vertigo (0.4%), amnesia (0.4%) |
| Tahir (2011) | Prospective study (1b) | 250 | 21.3 / 44.8% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d | 52 (20.8%) | Exact time NR, noted at F/Us every 4 wk | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Cheilitis (99.2%), dryness face (80.0%), erythema face (39.2%), skin dryness (33.6%), acne flare (32.0%), thirst (16.8%), pruritus (11.6%), dry oral mucosa (14.0%), MS pain 9.6%), headache (8.0%), visual disturbances (4.0%), depression (4.0%), epistaxis (1.6%), impaired lipids (1.6%), impaired liver function test (1.2%), red eyes (0.8%), insomnia (0.85%), mild diarrhea (0.4%) |
| Gan (2013) | Retrospective study (2b) | 2255 | 22.5 / 71.4% M | Acne vulgaris: nodulocystic or severe (65.4%), moderate (11.9%), mild-moderate relapsing (22.7%) | NR | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 33 (1.5%) | NR | Patient-reported | “Temporary” | NR | Cheilitis (64.8%), elevated lipids (12.2%), elevated liver function test (2.7%), muscle or joint pain (2.3%), headache (1.8%), mood change (1.6%), photosensitivity (1.5%), nausea (0.4%), blurred vision (0.4%), dizziness (0.2%) |
| Kmieć et al (2013) | Prospective study (1b) | 30 | 21.2 / 50% M | Papulopustular (n = 7), conglobate (n = 10) and phlegmonosa (n = 13) acne, no significant systemic disease | NR | WBD: 0.5-1.0 mg/kg/d | Significant decrease in average total hair count (245.3 to 231.9, | Exact time NR, measurements were performed at the end of treatment (5-7 mo) | FotoFinder dermatoscopy using TrichoScan Professional software (measured total hair count, density, proportion of anagen hair) | NR | NR | Skin dryness, pulling, burning, drying of mucous membranes, myalgia, headache, epistaxis (frequencies were NR) |
| Bray et al (2019) | Prospective study (1b) | 56 | 21 / 46.4% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 1 mg/kg/d | 1 (1.8%) | Exact time NR, noted at 2 and 4 mo F/U | Patient-reported | NR | One (1.8%) patient with dry skin, nosebleeds, lethargy and hair thinning discontinued isotretinoin use, however, not solely because of hair thinning | Significantly worsening mood, dry skin, nosebleeds, lethargy, blurred vision, sore eyes, polydipsia (frequencies were NR) |
| İslamoğlu and Altınyazar (2019) | Prospective study (1b) | 30 | 21.5 / 36.7% M | Severe acne vulgaris, no significant systemic disease | NR | WBD: 0.5 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | N/A | FotoFinder dermatoscopy device using TrichoScan Professional program (measured total hair count, hair density, % of anagen and telogen hair, before and after treatment) | N/A | N/A | NR |
| Pandey and Agrawal (2019) | Randomized, controlled comparative study (1b) | 50 | 21.6 / 46% M | Moderate-to-severe acne, no significant systemic disease | NR | WBD: 0.5-0.6 mg/kg/d | 0 (0%) | Exact time NR, noted at F/U every 4 wk for 12 wk | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Skin dryness (92%), nose dryness (27%), mouth dryness (100%), epistaxis (2%), face erythema (66%), scaling (14%), pruritus (50%), burning (12%), oiliness (6%), rash (8%), photosensitivity (12%) |
| 50 | 21.8 / 22% M | Moderate-to-severe acne, no significant systemic disease | Levocetrizine (5 mg) | WBD: 0.5-0.6 mg/kg/d | 5 (10%) | Exact time NR, noted at F/U every 4 wk for 12 wk | Patient-reported | NR | 0 (0%) | Skin dryness (76%), nose dryness (46%), mouth dryness (100%), eye dryness (22%), epistaxis (8%), face erythema (72%), scaling (16%), pruritus (18%), pruritus (18%), burning (4%), oiliness (25), rash (10%), photosensitivity (6%) | ||
| Rademaker (2010) | Retrospective chart review (2b) | 1743 (very low dose n = 450, low dose n = 471, medium n = 119, high n = 703) | Very low dose: 31.9 / 29.1% M | Acne vulgaris (n = 1653), folliculitis (n = 38), rosacea or periorificial dermatitis (n = 68), seborrheic dermatitis (n = 50), others (n = 55). Some patients had >1 condition | NR | WBD:Very low: <0.25 mg/kg/d;low: 0.26-0.5 mg/kg/d; medium: 0.51-0.75 mg/kg/d;high: 0.76-1.0 mg/kg/d | 2/1743 (reported hair loss was not broken down by isotretinoin dose) | NR | Patient-reported, hair loss was not asked about directly | NR | 0 (0%) in all groups | Dose <0.50 mg/kg/d: cheilitis (63%), eczema (8%), tiredness (7%), mood change (5%), skin fragility (3%), epistaxis (3%), muscle ache (2%), eye problems (2%) |
| Demirseren et al (2017) | Prospective study (1b) | 300 | 22.2 / 33.7% M | Moderate and severe acne and unresponsive to systemic antibiotic and topical treatments: | NR | WBD : 0.25-1 mg/kg/d (study pooled patients in low (<0.5) and high (>0.5) doses in the analysis) | 60 (20%) | Median: 4.0 wk | Patient-reported | NR | NR | Cheilitis (100%), dry face (61.3%), xerosis (57.0%), dry nose (55.0%), dermatitis (50.0%), epistaxis (46.7%), dry eye (43.3%), facial erythema (40.3%), acne flaring (38.0%), arthralgia (36.3%), fatigue (32.35), nervousness (24.3%), photosensitivity (24.0%), somnolence (21.3%), hypercholesterolemia (20.3%), myalgia (19.0%), palmar peeling (16.3%), headache (15.3%), weight gain (14.0%), hypertriglyceridemia (11.7%), herpes tip 1 (10.7%), menstrual irregularity (9.3%), weight loss (8.35), depressive symptoms (7.7%), hepatic dysfunction (7.3%), hand-feet sweating (5.7%), vaginal dryness (4.3%), ingrown toenail (4.3%), melasma (3.7%), increased CK (3.0%), photophobia (2.0%), nyctalopia (0.7%), conjunctivitis (0.7%), ear bleeding (0.3%) |
| Brzezinski et al (2017) | Retrospective study (2b) | 3525 | 18.5 / 47 % M | Moderate, severe, and nodulocystic inflammatory acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: 0.2-0.5 mg/kg/d | 154 (4.4%) | NR | Patient-reported | “Reported to persist even after therapy discontinuation” | 1 (0.03%) | Dry lips (100%), xerosis (95.0%), facial erythema (66.2%), epistaxis (47.3%), cheilitis (41.8%), myalgias (38.8%), skin itching (38.1%), skin exfoliation (38.1%), tiredness (20.7%), headache (16.9%), joint ache (12.3%), retinoid dermatitis (11.7%), trachyonychia (10.4%), mood change (9.5%), dry eyes (5.7%), abdominal pain (3.7%) vision changes (2.9%), insomnia (2.8%), sun sensitivity (2.6%), dry dandruff (1.7%), dryness of mucous membranes of the mouth (1.4%), skin fragility (1.3%), polydipsia (1.0%), heavy menstrual periods (0.9%), insomnia (0.5%), herpes simplex (0.4%), paronychia (0.4%), Staphylococcus skin infections (0.2%), impetigo (0.2%), GI upset (0.2%), chalazion (0.1%), hyperhidrosis 0.1%), exacerbation cysts (0.06%), dry eye syndrome (0.06%), suicidal ideation (0.03%), intensification of fears (0.03%), blurred vision at night (0.03%), bleeding gums (0.03%), flare up of psoriasis (0.03%), herpes zoster (0.03) |
| Alshammari et al (2020) | Cross-sectional/questionnaire (2b) | 246 | 25.1 / 17% M | Acne vulgaris | NR | WBD: Not possible to calculate because weights were not reported. Fixed doses of 20-40 mg/d with the following BMI ranges: 130 patients with <25 kg/m2, 71 patients with 25-29.9 kg/m2, 26 patients with >30 kg/m2. | 6 (2.4%) | NR | Patient-reported | NR | NR | None (49.2%), dry lips (3.7%), dry skin (3.7%), skin itching (3.3%), depressive symptoms (3.3%), joint and muscle pain (2.4%), increased heart rate (0.4%), headache (0.4%), impaired liver enzymes (0.4%) |
BMI, Body mass index; CD, cumulative dose; CK, creatinine kinase; CR, case report; CS, case series; F/U, follow-up; GI, gastrointestinal; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; MS, musculoskeletal; N/A, not applicable; NR, not reported; WBD, weight-based dose.
This group of studies compared low versus high daily dosing within the articles and commented on hair loss at the respective doses.
This group of studies did not clearly distinguish the side effects, including hair loss, in the low- versus high-dose isotretinoin groups. Although these data exist in the literature, they could not be analyzed further.
Compiled summary data of 17 studies (n = 3940) that clearly reported hair loss frequency in oral isotretinoin doses of <0.5 mg/kg/d and ≥0.5 mg/kg/d for acne patients∗
| Daily isotretinoin dose | Mean age (y) | Number of men:women | Mean daily weight- based dose (mg/kg/d) | Mean duration of therapy (mo) | Mean cumulative dose (mg/kg) | Number of patients with hair loss | Total number of patients | Frequency of hair loss (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <0.5mg/kg/d | 22.0 | 360:205 | 0.24 | 4.4 | 70.6 | 18 | 565 | 3.2 |
| ≥0.5mg/kg/d | 22.4 | 2049:1326 | 0.59 | 6.5 | 97.2 | 192 | 3375 | 5.7 |
The studies had to include clearly reported hair loss frequency for the low versus high dose of daily isotretinoin to be included in this summary table. Therefore, of the 22 reported studies, 17 were included in this summary table (studies by Kmieć et al, Rademaker et al, Demirseren et al, Alshammari et al, and Brzezinski et al were excluded).
This value is the mean of 302 of the total 565 patients in this group. The entire low-dose group is not represented because 29 patients were on a fixed dose of 20 mg every 2 days and 234 patients were on a fixed dose of 20 mg/d. Although clearly low dose, weight was not provided to calculate the exact weight-based dose.
This value is the mean of 3318 of the total 3375 patients in this group. The entire high-dose group is not represented because 57 patients were on an average fixed dose of 44.2 mg/d. Although clearly high dose, weight was not provided to calculate the exact weight-based dose.