Weekend Herald

The bald truth about men and Covid-19

Hair loss seen as serious factor in illness after scientific studies

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Bald men may be at higher risk of suffering from severe Covid-19 symptoms, emerging evidence suggests.

The link is so strong that some researcher­s are suggesting baldness should be considered a risk factor called the “Gabrin sign”, after the first US physician to die of Covid-19 in the United States, Dr Frank Gabrin, who was bald.

The lead author of the key study behind the associatio­n, Professor Carlos Wambier of Brown University, told the Telegraph: “We really think that baldness is a perfect predictor of severity.”

Data since the beginning of the outbreak in Wuhan, China, in January has shown that men are more likely to die after getting coronaviru­s. In the UK, a report this week from Public Health England found that workingage males were twice as likely as females to die after being diagnosed with Covid-19.

Until recently, scientists have been at a loss at why this might be, pointing to factors such as lifestyle, smoking, and immune system difference­s between the sexes. But increasing­ly they believe it could be because androgens — male sex hormones like testostero­ne — may play a part not only in hair loss, but also in boosting the ability of coronaviru­s to attack cells.

This raises the possibilit­y that treatments suppressin­g these hormones, such as those used for baldness as well as diseases like prostate cancer, could be used to slow the virus down, giving patients time to fight it off.

“We think androgens or male hormones are definitely the gateway for the virus to enter our cells,” said Prof Wambier. The trial follows two small studies in Spain, led by Prof Wambier, which found that a disproport­ionately high number of men with male-pattern baldness were admitted to hospital with Covid-19.

In one study, 79 per cent of the men suffering with Covid-19 in three Madrid hospitals were bald. The study of 122 patients, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatolog­y, followed an earlier piece of work among 41 patients in Spanish hospitals, which found 71 per cent were bald.

The background rate of baldness in white men of a similar age to the patients studied is between 31-53 per cent. A similar correlatio­n was found in the study among the smaller numbers of women with hair loss linked to androgens.

We really think that baldness is a perfect predictor of severity. Professor Carlos Wambier

Other scientists said that more work needed to be done, but were excited by the potential link.

A separate trial has been launched by Matthew Rettig, an oncologist at UC Los Angeles, with 200 veterans in Los Angeles, Seattle and New York, using prostate cancer drugs.

“Everybody is chasing a link between androgens . . . and the outcome of Covid-19,” Howard Soule, executive vice president at the Prostate Cancer Foundation, told Science magazine.

A study from Veneto, Italy, of 9280 patients found that men with prostate cancer who were on androgen deprivatio­n therapy—drugs that cut testostero­ne levels — were only a quarter as likely to contract Covid-19 as men with the disease who were on other treatments.

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