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Post‐chemotherapy alopecia: what the dermatologist needs to know

Thuany Silva Santos, Kely Hernández Galvis, Sérgio Vañó-Galván, David Saceda‐Corralo

2021International Journal of Dermatology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

It is estimated that chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) occurs in 65% of chemotherapeutic patients. Forty-seven percent of cancer patients consider hair loss to be the most traumatic aspect of therapy. CIA can be anticipated, depending on the regimen used, and doctors should be aware of the treatments that can minimize it. Careful evaluation before chemotherapy treatment should be performed, and trichoscopy may be useful. Dermatologists do not generally evaluate postchemotherapy alopecia. However, there is an increasing number of reports of permanent chemotherapy-induced alopecia, and these patients require treatment.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineChemotherapyHair lossDermatologyRegimenCancer chemotherapyChemotherapy regimenSurgeryHair Growth and DisordersChemotherapy-related skin toxicityNonmelanoma Skin Cancer Studies
Post‐chemotherapy alopecia: what the dermatologist needs to know | Litcius