A Clinician’s Guide to Pediatric and Adolescent Alopecia Areata Treatments

    September 2024 in “ JAAD reviews.
    Heli A. Patel, Rishab Revankar, Jenna E. Koblinski, Benjamin Ungar, Emma Guttman‐Yassky, Jamie MacKelfresh, Dirk M. Elston, Peter Lio
    TLDR Topical corticosteroids are recommended first for treating pediatric alopecia areata due to their safety and ease of use.
    The document serves as a comprehensive guide for clinicians treating pediatric and adolescent alopecia areata (AA), emphasizing the importance of shared decision-making and patient-centered communication. It recommends topical corticosteroids as the initial treatment due to their safety and ease of use, while also discussing other treatments like topical minoxidil, intralesional corticosteroids, and JAK inhibitors, which have varying effectiveness and side effects. The guide highlights the psychosocial impact of AA on children and the need for a multidisciplinary approach, including support groups and psychological counseling. It also reviews various treatment options, such as dupilumab, systemic corticosteroids, and phototherapy, stressing the need for individualized treatment plans due to the heterogeneous nature of AA. The document calls for further research to better understand the efficacy and safety of these treatments, particularly in pediatric populations, and notes the limitations of some data sources, which may affect the generalizability of findings.
    Discuss this study in the Community →

    Research cited in this study

    35 / 35 results

    Related Community Posts Join

    6 / 1000+ results

      community The Worst Hair Loss Condition You (MAY) have: LPP

      in Research/Science  52 upvotes 1 year ago
      Lichen Planopilaris (LPP) is an autoimmune condition causing permanent hair loss and fibrosis, often misdiagnosed. Treatments include pioglitazone, topical corticosteroids, anti-inflammatory medication, and Jak inhibitors.

      community 14 months into fin + min and my hair is way worse than before

      in Chat  22 upvotes 1 year ago
      The user experienced worsening hair loss despite using finasteride, minoxidil, and microneedling. Suggestions included reducing microneedling frequency, switching to oral minoxidil, adding tretinoin, and considering dutasteride.

      community Well here I am 3-4 years later.

      in Update  56 upvotes 2 years ago
      The conversation is about someone who has been taking finasteride for hair loss without success, considering switching to dutasteride or giving up treatment. Suggestions include trying dutasteride, microneedling, infrared therapy, multivitamins, and high-concentration topical solutions combining finasteride and dutasteride.

      community Scalp Inflammation is eating my hair!

      in Chat  26 upvotes 1 year ago
      A user with seborrheic dermatitis is experiencing bald spots and hair thinning despite changing their diet and taking oral minoxidil. Another user suggests using ketoconazole shampoo properly, using a scalp massager, applying rosemary/peppermint oil, keeping hair short, and taking fish oil to improve scalp health.

      community Rare Non responder to Finasteride, Dutasteride, and oral minoxidil

      in Minoxidil  78 upvotes 2 years ago
      A user did not respond to finasteride, dutasteride, and oral minoxidil for hair loss after four years of treatment and is considering scalp micropigmentation (SMP). Other users suggest the hair loss pattern may indicate alopecia areata and recommend seeing a dermatologist.

      community 17M biotin and minoxidil hair regrowth progress

      in Progress Pictures  83 upvotes 2 years ago
      A user's hair regrowth journey using biotin and minoxidil after initial treatments with Nizoral shampoo and Ketoconazole serum didn't work. The comments suggest the hair loss might not be male pattern baldness (MPB), but possibly Alopecia Areata, an autoimmune disorder, and recommend getting a second opinion and considering other treatments like corticosteroids.

    Related Research

    1 / 1 results