Treatment landscape
Finasteride: what the trials actually showed
It is the most-studied oral drug in the category. The data is genuinely good — and genuinely more modest than the marketing around it.
Key points
- Finasteride 1 mg is FDA-approved for male androgenetic alopecia; it works by inhibiting the conversion of testosterone to DHT.
- In the pivotal 2-year trials, most treated men maintained or increased hair count versus progressive loss on placebo.
- "Maintained" is doing a lot of work in that sentence: stopping further loss is the primary, best-supported effect.
- Drug-related sexual adverse effects occurred in a small minority in trials; the long-tail debate about persistent effects is unresolved and worth discussing with a prescriber.
The mechanism, in one paragraph
Male pattern loss is androgen-driven: follicles in susceptible zones miniaturize under the influence of dihydrotestosterone (DHT). Finasteride inhibits 5-alpha-reductase type II, the enzyme that converts testosterone to DHT, lowering scalp and serum DHT substantially. Less DHT, slower miniaturization. That's the whole theory, and it's well-supported.
The pivotal evidence
The 1998 randomized, placebo-controlled trials (1,553 men aged 18–41 with mild-to-moderate vertex loss) found that at two years, treated men averaged a significant increase in hair count in the target area while the placebo group continued losing. Investigator and patient assessments aligned. Follow-on extension studies out to five years showed the gap between treated and untreated men widening over time — mostly because untreated loss keeps compounding.
Two honest caveats. First, enrollment skewed young with vertex-pattern loss; evidence in older men and purely frontal patterns is weaker. Second, average improvements are modest in cosmetic terms — the reliable win is keeping what you have.
The side-effect question, without spin
In the pivotal trials, drug-related sexual adverse events (decreased libido, erectile dysfunction, ejaculation disorder) were reported by roughly 4% of treated men versus about 2% on placebo, and most resolved on discontinuation — many even with continued use. Separately, a community of men report persistent symptoms after stopping ("post-finasteride syndrome"); the condition is contested in the literature, with case series and registry signals on one side and methodological critiques on the other. Our read: the trial-level risk numbers are small and real; the persistent-effects question is unresolved; both belong in a frank conversation with a prescriber — not in a comment-section verdict either way.
Practical evidence notes
- Effect requires ongoing use; discontinuation returns you to your natural trajectory within about a year.
- A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis rated finasteride and minoxidil as the interventions with the strongest evidence in male androgenetic alopecia.
- Topical finasteride formulations are an active research area aiming at similar efficacy with lower systemic exposure; quality of evidence is growing but thinner than for the oral form.
Citations
- Kaufman KD, et al. Finasteride in the treatment of men with androgenetic alopecia. Finasteride Male Pattern Hair Loss Study Group. J Am Acad Dermatol. 1998;39(4 Pt 1):578-589.
- The Finasteride Male Pattern Hair Loss Study Group. Long-term (5-year) multinational experience with finasteride 1 mg in the treatment of men with androgenetic alopecia. Eur J Dermatol. 2002;12(1):38-49.
- Adil A, Godwin M. The effectiveness of treatments for androgenetic alopecia: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017;77(1):136-141.e5.