NEW
YORK, March 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Small
amounts of a common antibiotic and anti-inflammatory drug can curb
symptoms where a misplaced immune reaction
(e.g., autoimmunity) can cause permanent hair loss, a new
study shows. This regimen may also come with fewer side effects
than higher doses of the medication.
Besides warding off unpleasant side
effects, lower doses of the drug may also safeguard gut
health.
Led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, the study explored
lymphocytic scarring alopecia, a rare skin condition in which the
body's immune cells damage hair follicles, leading to hair loss and
scarring. Physicians typically treat this chronic disorder with
relatively high doses of the antibiotic doxycycline, often for
prolonged periods of time. However, the drug can trigger nausea,
vomiting, and rashes and may discourage patients from continuing to
take it, the study authors say. As a result, the team set out to
determine whether lower doses could work instead.
The findings in 241 men and women treated for several forms of
lymphocytic scarring alopecia revealed that lower doses (usually 20
milligrams taken twice daily) and higher doses (as much as 100
milligrams taken twice daily) of doxycycline were equally
effective. Specifically, the researchers found no significant
difference between the two groups on evaluations of scalp
inflammation, patients' perception of the severity of their hair
loss, and clinical measurements of hair density, hair-shaft
diameter, and hairline recession.
In addition, while 23% of those on the high-dose regimen
experienced common negative side effects of doxycycline, only 12%
of those taking smaller doses of the drug did so. Another key
finding was that while 25% of the high-dose group stopped taking
doxycycline altogether due to gastrointestinal issues, only 16% of
the low-dose group stopped treatment due to this side effect.
"Our findings suggest that physicians can prescribe lower doses
of doxycycline to patients struggling with lymphocytic scarring
alopecia without compromising the efficacy and anti-inflammatory
benefit of the therapy," said study co-lead author Carli Needle, BA.
Needle, a medical student at NYU Grossman School of Medicine,
adds that besides warding off unpleasant side effects, lower doses
of the drug may also safeguard gut health. Doxycycline, she notes,
is known to harm the helpful bacteria that live in the digestive
tract and bolster the body's defenses against disease-causing
microbes. However, past studies have shown that drug doses below 40
milligrams are less risky for beneficial microbes.
The new study is the first to directly compare the efficacy of
different-size doses of doxycycline to treat lymphocytic scarring
alopecia, says Needle.
A report on the findings is publishing March 18 in the Journal of the American
Academy of Dermatology.
For the study, the research team collected data from electronic
medical records of patients with scarring alopecia treated at NYU
Langone Health between 2009 and 2023. Of these, about 27% had been
prescribed low doses of doxycycline and nearly 73% were on
traditional high-dose regimens. Next, the team ran a
statistical analysis to compare the two groups. The researchers
discounted from their analysis any effects of other medications
that commonly accompany this treatment, such as the hair-growth
drug minoxidil.
According to the authors, a further advantage of reducing
doxycycline doses is that experts have linked the drug to the rise
of dangerous bacterial populations that can survive antibiotic
treatments. Clinicians worldwide are now seeking to combat such
antibiotic resistance by limiting how often and in what quantities
they prescribe these drugs, a practice called antibiotic
stewardship.
"Our results offer another avenue for healthcare providers to
protect patients from harm caused by unnecessary antibiotic use and
address the rise of drug-resistant strains of microbes," said study
co-lead author Anna Brinks, BA, a
medical student at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
"Alopecia can have a devastating effect on self-image and can
lead to social judgment, depression, and anxiety," added study
co-senior author Kristen Lo Sicco,
MD. "Studies that advance the management of these conditions are
critical to addressing not only hair loss itself, but also the
psychological and social consequences that accompany it."
Lo Sicco, an associate professor in the Ronald O. Perelman
Department of Dermatology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, says
that the researchers next plan to repeat their work in a larger and
more diverse group, as the study patients were mostly White.
In addition, she says the team intends to explore the triggers
that cause lymphocytic scarring alopecia, which remain poorly
understood.
Study funding was provided by NYU Langone Health.
In addition to Needle, Brinks, and Lo Sicco, other NYU Langone
researchers involved in the study are Akshay Pulavarty, MD, MPH;
Caitlin Kearney, BS; Ambika Nohria, BA; Deesha Desai, BS; and Jerry Shapiro, MD.
About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully
integrated health system that consistently achieves the best
patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has
resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation.
Vizient, Inc., has ranked NYU Langone the No. 1 comprehensive
academic medical center in the country for three years in a row,
and U.S. News & World Report recently placed nine of its
clinical specialties among the top five in the nation. NYU Langone
offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high
standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter
Cancer Center, and more than 300 outpatient locations in the
New York area and Florida. With $14.2
billion in revenue this year, the system also includes two
tuition-free medical schools, in Manhattan and on Long Island, and a vast research enterprise
with over $1 billion in active awards
from the National Institutes of Health.
Media Inquiries:
Shira
Polan
Phone: 212-404-4279
shira.polan@nyulangone.org
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SOURCE NYU Grossman School of Medicine and NYU Langone
Health