Anagen effluvium
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Synopsis

Anagen effluvium can occur in up to 65% of patients undergoing chemotherapy. Cancer treatment-induced alopecia depends on the specific agent and the route, dose, and schedule of administration. High-dose, intermittent, intravenous (IV) chemotherapy is more likely to cause higher-grade alopecia than low-dose therapy, oral administration, and weekly IV regimens. Combination therapies are more likely to cause some level of alopecia compared to single agents. Chemotherapy agents at highest risk of causing alopecia include cytotoxic agents (ie, alkylating agents, antitumor antibiotics, antimicrotubule agents, and topoisomerase inhibitors), endocrine therapy (ie, estrogen antagonists, aromatase inhibitors, CDK4/6 inhibitors), and molecularly targeted agents (ie, EGFR inhibitors). Other risk factors include poor drug metabolism, prior exposure to scalp irradiation, older age, presence of androgenic alopecia, prior chemotherapy-induced alopecia, and graft-versus-host disease.
Other causes of anagen effluvium include protein malnutrition, pemphigus vulgaris, systemic lupus erythematosus, alopecia areata, and secondary syphilis. Radiation therapy is a known trigger and may result in irreversible alopecia (radiation-induced alopecia).
Anagen effluvium is self-limiting, and the duration of disease is dependent on the duration of toxic insult. High dosages of drug therapy and polypharmacy might be associated with a more severe phenotype.
The most common cause of drug-induced alopecia in children is chemotherapy-induced anagen effluvium.
Thiotepa is the drug most commonly involved in permanent chemotherapy-induced alopecia.
Codes
L65.1 – Anagen effluvium
SNOMEDCT:
86160006 – Anagen effluvium
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Last Updated:06/01/2025