hair return
Comments
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Hi @chibipink. I'm with the policy team. Prolonged or
permanent hair loss from chemotherapy drugs is very rare. It has been reported in a very small number of cases around the world. We encourage women who have any concerns about hair loss from chemotherapy to speak with their medical oncologist. We have put an update on this in our website information on hair loss here: https://www.bcna.org.au/understanding-breast-cancer/treatment/chemotherapy/hair-loss/
Our hair loss fact sheet also has a list of common combinations of chemotherapy drugs used to treat breast cancer, along with their likely effect on your hair. https://www.bcna.org.au/media/2137/bcna-fact-sheet-hair-loss-during-breastcancer-treatment.pdf
I hope this helps.
If you have any further queries or comments, please feel free to get in touch.
Best wishes
Pauline McLoughlin
Senior Policy Officer, BCNA
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But Pauline, it may be rare when you consider every woman who has had chemotherapy, but when you take just those that have received docetaxal, it is not.
https://www.schmidtandclark.com/wp-content/uploads/Alopecia-FECdoce-Kluger-AnnOnco2012.pdf
http://journals.lww.com/amjdermatopathology/Abstract/2011/06000/Permanent_Alopecia_After_Systemic_Chemotherapy__A.3.aspx
and therefore any patient being offered docetaxal should be warned of this risk beforehand. I for one, would not have taken it if I'd known in advance.
It looks like the lawyers in the US are getting very excited at the prospect of the class actions they are going to milk undertake. In Europe, apparently, the label for the drug has warned of the possibility of permanent hair loss for a decade, but in Australia, even the Policy Officers of the most important breast cancer advocacy group are denying it.0 -
Your website says
"Yes. The good news is that hair loss from chemotherapy is only temporary and your hair will grow back once your treatment is finished. Approximately six weeks after your final treatment, you will have grown a short but thick covering of hair over your entire scalp. - See more at: https://www.bcna.org.au/understanding-breast-cancer/treatment/chemotherapy/hair-loss/#sthash.4lAxnZdr.dpuf"
That statement needs a caveat in order not to be misleading.1 -
chibipink said:I'm so sorry Katie. I was on FECD, D for Docetaxal, and when I found out 2%, that's one in 50!, of women don't get their hair back I flipped out in the oncologist's office. She told me she'd never heard of such a thing, just not true. The next dose I was back in her office with the research paper but she had looked it up herself. "Yeah, it's 2%", she said. When my hair came back she admitted that she had been worried. So at least there is now one oncoologist in Australia who knows the risks and hopefully is informing women before they start treatment.
I'm so pleased you drew it to the attention of at least one oncologist. Maybe it will result in some useful discussion and save another woman a lot of grief. I suspect that the research results they currently have saying 2% will be updated to a higher figure as more data comes through the channels.
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Interesting, fortunately y hair did come back after Docetaxel albeit very curly rather than the dead straight it was. I will notify my oncologist of the 2%, just in case he hasn't see the literature on it.1