Pathobiology of chemotherapy-induced hair loss

Summary Hair loss can be a psychologically devastating adverse effect of chemotherapy, but satisfactory management strategies for chemotherapy-induced alopecia remain elusive. In this Review we focus on the complex pathobiology of this side-effect. We discuss the clinical features and current manage...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet oncology 2013-02, Vol.14 (2), p.e50-e59
Hauptverfasser: Paus, Ralf, Prof, Haslam, Iain S, PhD, Sharov, Andrey A, MD, Botchkarev, Vladimir A, Prof
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary Hair loss can be a psychologically devastating adverse effect of chemotherapy, but satisfactory management strategies for chemotherapy-induced alopecia remain elusive. In this Review we focus on the complex pathobiology of this side-effect. We discuss the clinical features and current management approaches, then draw upon evidence from mouse models and human hair-follicle organ-culture studies to explore the main pathobiology principles and explain why chemotherapy-induced alopecia is so challenging to manage. P53-dependent apoptosis of hair-matrix keratinocytes and chemotherapy-induced hair-cycle abnormalities, driven by the dystrophic anagen or dystrophic catagen pathway, play important parts in the degree of hair-follicle damage, alopecia phenotype, and hair-regrowth pattern. Additionally, the degree of hair-follicle stem-cell damage determines whether chemotherapy-induced alopecia is reversible. We highlight the need for carefully designed preclinical research models to generate novel, clinically relevant pointers to how this condition may be overcome.
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(12)70553-3