Rogaine (topical) / generic oral for male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia)
How Rogaine (topical) / generic oral (minoxidil) is used in male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia), what the clinical evidence shows, and how it compares to other treatment options.
Male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia): what it is
Male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia) is the most common form of hair loss in men, affecting ~50% by age 50 and ~80% by age 70. Caused by genetic sensitivity of scalp hair follicles to dihydrotestosterone (DHT), leading to progressive follicular miniaturization. Pattern follows the Norwood-Hamilton scale (I-VII).
How Rogaine (topical) / generic oral fits into male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia) treatment
Three FDA-approved treatments with evidence: oral finasteride 1 mg daily (1997 approval), topical minoxidil 2-5% twice daily (1988), and oral minoxidil low-dose (off-label, increasingly used). Dutasteride 0.5 mg (off-label in US) has greater DHT suppression. Hair transplantation for established loss. Earlier intervention is more effective than reactive treatment.
Rogaine (topical) / generic oral works by: Widens blood vessels around hair follicles, increases nutrient delivery, prolongs the anagen (growth) phase. Works on different mechanism than finasteride — they're complementary.
Who qualifies for Rogaine (topical) / generic oral for male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia)
Adult men and women with hair loss. Topical: anyone. Oral: requires prescription; clinician will check BP and pulse before starting.
How Rogaine (topical) / generic oral compares to other male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia) treatments
Finasteride (Propecia) for male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia)
Oral DHT blocker. Standard of care for male-pattern hair loss. ~80% slow shedding, ~60% regrow.…
Avodart for male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia)
Stronger DHT blocker than finasteride. Off-label for hair loss. Higher effect, smaller evidence base.…
Frequently asked about male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia)
- Does finasteride really work?
- Yes. The pivotal 5-year trial showed 65% of men on finasteride 1 mg/day had stable hair counts or regrowth, compared to 0% on placebo. The earlier you start, the more hair you preserve — finasteride prevents miniaturization but can't fully reverse advanced loss.
- What's the difference between finasteride and dutasteride?
- Both block the enzyme that converts testosterone to DHT. Finasteride targets type II 5-alpha-reductase; dutasteride blocks both type I and II and produces ~90% DHT reduction vs ~70% for finasteride. Dutasteride is FDA-approved for benign prostatic hyperplasia, not hair loss, but is prescribed off-label for AGA.
- Can I stop finasteride once my hair has stabilized?
- No. Discontinuation typically returns scalp DHT to baseline within weeks and miniaturization resumes. Hair gains from finasteride are maintained only as long as treatment continues. The same applies to minoxidil — stop the drug, lose the gains over 3-12 months.
- Are oral and topical minoxidil equally effective?
- Off-label low-dose oral minoxidil (typically 1.25-5 mg daily) is increasingly used and produces comparable or superior regrowth in observational comparisons. Topical minoxidil is the FDA-approved form; the oral path is dermatologist-prescribed off-label with attention to systemic effects (peripheral edema, hair growth elsewhere).
Rogaine (topical) / generic oral for other conditions
Rogaine (topical) / generic oral is only catalogued for male-pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia) in our condition library.