Family History and Risk of
Hair Loss
W. Cameron Chumlea, Thomas Rhodes, Cynthia J. Girman, Amy
Johnson-Levonas, Flavius R.W. Lilly, Ruishan Wu, Shumei S. Guo
Dermatology 2004
Abstract
Introduction: The genetic basis of androgenetic
alopecia (AGA) is well accepted in the medical community and among the
general population. However, rigorous studies investigating the familial
basis of AGA are lacking.
The purpose of the current study was to explore the
relationship between family history and expression of AGA in a sample of
men from the general community.
Methods: hair loss
was assessed by an independent observer trained by an expert
dermatologist using the Norwood/Hamilton classification scale and a
7-point global description of hair loss.
Men were classified into two groups, one as having
little or no hair loss and the other
having hair loss. The family history
of hair loss in parents and
grandparents was assessed by subject self-report.
Results: Adjusting for age, men whose fathers had
hair loss were 2.5 times as likely
to have had some level of hair loss
compared to men whose fathers had no hair
loss (95% CI: 1.3-4.9).
Likewise, men whose fathers had
hair loss were twice as likely to
have hair loss than men whose
fathers had no hair loss even after
adjusting for age (OR = 2.1, 95% CI: 1.2-3.7 and OR = 2.5, 95% CI:
1.4-4.7 for Norwood/Hamilton and global description of
hair loss assessments,
respectively).
Conclusion: Results suggest that the probability of
male pattern hair loss is dependent
on family history and age. hair loss
in a man's father also appears to play an important role in increasing a
man's risk of hair loss, either in
conjunction with a history of hair loss
in the mother or hair loss in the
maternal grandfather.
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