Note: I believe these were from two different people, but the questions are related so I’ll answer them together…
Email #1
Now doc , i have a suggestion to make just like you do.You write “Every person will eventually lose the benefits of this drug, but the open question is when†– there is no proof for this , or you do have one ? Even if this statement is based on your experience , you are aware that this is not official and there is not way to be.The official one is that after 5 years only 10 % of the people lose some hair , and please attention – more of teh 50 % of the rest CONTINUED to improve even after this.So unless you can prove the opposite ,please flag those ones as “my opiniion †or “may†or “might †, but please do not make statements which are neither proven nor stuided in the medical literature – 10x
Email #2
Why do you recommend Propecia to people that come to you for hair transplants if the effect is only temporary? I just ask because you emphasize a master plan for long term benefits, and it seems like as soon as the drug stops working, the hair it saved will fall out and the patient will have that embarrassing pluggy look -bald head with transplanted hairs. Isn’t it setting up people for more misery to take a drug that temporarily grows their hair back, only for it to fail and then they experience going bald again?
Thanks for your time
Read the official study posted at Hairlosstalk.com and you can draw whatever conclusions you want from it. I believe that this drug has a forever component, but that does not mean that it will hold all of the initial benefits forever. Each person will react differently and I can’t give an exact timetable for when you’ll start to see thinning continuing (if ever). So yes, the medication does work “forever” as long as you continue taking, but the benefits may eventually appear to be less. It could be 5 years, it could be 20 years. The only facts at our hands are in the official Merck/FDA studies.
Propecia’s benefits aren’t quite temporary. It’s not just going to suddenly one day turn itself off 100%. The entire point of a Master Plan is to create a roadmap for a worst case scenario of hair loss so that nobody is taken by surprise if the progressive nature of MPB becomes more evident a decade after you start Propecia. With the modern hair transplantation, the “embarrassing pluggy look” you described shouldn’t occur.
Propecia is a miracle drug for many people, as it gets them some (or a lot) of their hair back… and it largely slows or stops the hair loss. Many of my patients swear by this medication. This is a type of medication in that if it grew hair back and stopped or slowed hair loss, them some benefit will probably last ‘forever’. Of course, you can test this by just stopping the drug and seeing what happens. Most people who saw substantial benefits and then stopped the medication saw hair loss, which suggests that the drug had some residual value. The alternative is that you can elect to take your natural balding process to its conclusion, reflecting your genetic makeup. Your choice, of course.