Systematic Review of Psychological Interventions for Quality of Life, Mental Health, and Hair Growth in Alopecia Areata and Scarring Alopecia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Collection and Search Results
3. Results
3.1. Mindfulness
3.2. Collocated Behavioral Health Treatment
3.3. Hypnotherapy
Study | Type of Hair Loss | Study Design | Sample Size | Intervention | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gallo et al. (2017) [18] | Alopecia areata (moderate to severe) | Prospective cohort, with control | 16 (8 intervention, 8 control) | Eight-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction in addition to ongoing AA medical treatment. | In MBSR group: Significant improvement in AA-QLI subjective symptoms and relationship impacts (maintained at 6 months) Significant improvement in Brief Symptom Inventory on anxiety (maintained at 6 months), phobia, overall psychological distress, and global severity index. |
Harrison and Stepanek (1991) [32] | Refractory alopecia (scarring and non-scarring alopecia) | Pilot study | 5 | 10–12 forty-five-minute sessions of hypnotherapy over 3 months and recordings for home use. | All participants reported a feeling of well-being. Three patients: partial hair regrowth One patient: significant regrowth One patient: no change |
Willemsen et al. (2006) [24] | 12 with extensive alopecia areata, 9 with alopecia totalis or universalis | Prospective cohort | 21 | In person hypnosis sessions every 3 weeks along with hypnosis twice weekly from a recording at home. | Significant improvement in Symptom Check List, anxiety, and depression scales. Significant hair regrowth in 12 patients. |
Willemsen et al. (2010) [33] | Alopecia areata, alopecia totalis and universalis, all for at least 3 months prior to enrollment | Prospective cohort, with control, nonrandomized | 41 (20 intervention, 21 control) | 10 hypnotherapy sessions performed bimonthly along with daily hypnotherapy from a recording at home. No concurrent hair loss treatments. | At 6 months, the hypnotherapy group reported significantly greater reductions in depression, anxiety, and symptom burden scores. Eight patients from hypnosis group experienced (non-significant) hair growth. |
Willemsen et al. (2011) [19] | Alopecia areata | Prospective cohort | 21 | 10 hypnotherapy sessions over 6-months and daily hypnosis recording at home. | At 6 months, the Symptom Check List, alexithymia, and Skindex-17 (dermatology related quality of life) scores all improved. This was maintained 6 months after treatment. |
Teshima et al. (1991) [20] | Alopecia universalis (refractory) | Clinical trial, not blinded | 11 (6 intervention, 5 control) | Psychoimmunotherapy: Six patients underwent 4 months of 30-min relaxation therapy in addition to oral prednisolone and later cyclosporine given to all participants. | In the psychoimmunotherapy group, five/six participants saw hair regrowth. There was also increases in scalp blood flow. In immunotherapy only group: one/five participants had regrowth. |
Matzer et al. (2011) [36] | Alopecia areata | Cross sectional | 45 | Interview at baseline and 6 months evaluating coping strategies and disease burden. | Active and open coping strategies were associated with reduced disease burden in chronic AA. |
Heapy et al. (2021) [21] | Alopecia areata | Case series | 5 (data excluded from 1 due to missing data) | Eight-session mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) intervention | Reduction in idiographic measures of social anxiety, with greater effects from baseline to follow-up than baseline to postintervention. Significant improvement in measures of well-being from baseline to follow-up in two participants who implemented MBCT exercises frequently between sessions. |
Gorbatenko-Roth et al. (2021) [22] | Alopecia areata | Randomized, controlled pilot study | 30 (20 intervention, 10 control) | AA-specific collocated behavioral health (CLBH) treatment, involving up to 2, 30-min sessions. | CLBH group reported better psychosocial functioning than control for most outcomes, although differences were nonsignificant CLBH was perceived as beneficial; 100% reported increased dermatology care satisfaction, 90% endorsed addressing psychosocial issues during dermatology visits. |
Item | Randomization /2 1 Point if Randomization Is Mentioned 1 Additional Point if the Method of Randomization Is Appropriate | Blinding /2 1 Point if Blinding Is Mentioned 1 Additional Point if the Method of Blinding Is Appropriate Deduct 1 Point if the Method of Blinding Is Inappropriate | An Account of All Patients /1 The Fate of All Patients in the Trial Is Known. If There Are No Data, the Reason Is Stated | Total Score /5 Max 5 Points |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gallo et al. (2017) [18] | 0 No randomization | 0 No mention of blinding | 1 Results were reported with eight individuals in each group, implying all 16 participants completed the study. | 1 |
Harrison and Stepanek (1991) [32] | 0 No randomization/control group | 0 No blinding | 0 A total of 5/12 patients completed the study, but authors do not state why 7 did not complete the study. | 0 |
Willemsen et al. (2006) [24] | 0 No randomization/control group | 0 No blinding | 1 Only 21/28 patients completed the study, but authors state that 7 patients withdrew due to lack of motivation. | 1 |
Willemsen et al. (2010) [33] | 0 A nonrandomized controlled study protocol was selected for ethical reasons | 0 No mention of blinding | 1 Results were reported with 20 treatment patients and 21 control patients, implying all 41 participants completed the study. | 1 |
Willemsen et al. (2011) [19] | 0 No randomization | 0 No blinding | 1 A total of 24 patients were included in the study, and 3 patients dropped out (one due to lack of motivation, two due to failure to concentrate while listening to the audiotape for self-hypnosis). | 1 |
Teshima et al. (1991) [20] | 0 No randomization | 0 No blinding | 1 Results reported for 11/11 patients. | 1 |
Matzer et al. (2011) [36] | 0 No randomization | 0 No blinding | 1 Results reported for 45/45 patients. Two could not be contacted for 6-month follow up. | 1 |
Heapy et al. (2021) [21] | 0 No randomization | 0 No blinding | 1 Results reported for four/five patients (one excluded due to incomplete responses). | 1 |
Gorbatenko-Roth et al. (2021) [22] | 2 Randomized appropriately | 0 No blinding | 0 Participation and 1-month follow-up rates were 68% and 90%, respectively. | 2 |
3.4. Psychoimmunotherapy
3.5. Coping Strategies
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Maloh, J.; Engel, T.; Natarelli, N.; Nong, Y.; Zufall, A.; Sivamani, R.K. Systematic Review of Psychological Interventions for Quality of Life, Mental Health, and Hair Growth in Alopecia Areata and Scarring Alopecia. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 964. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030964
Maloh J, Engel T, Natarelli N, Nong Y, Zufall A, Sivamani RK. Systematic Review of Psychological Interventions for Quality of Life, Mental Health, and Hair Growth in Alopecia Areata and Scarring Alopecia. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(3):964. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030964
Chicago/Turabian StyleMaloh, Jessica, Tess Engel, Nicole Natarelli, Yvonne Nong, Alina Zufall, and Raja K. Sivamani. 2023. "Systematic Review of Psychological Interventions for Quality of Life, Mental Health, and Hair Growth in Alopecia Areata and Scarring Alopecia" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 3: 964. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030964
APA StyleMaloh, J., Engel, T., Natarelli, N., Nong, Y., Zufall, A., & Sivamani, R. K. (2023). Systematic Review of Psychological Interventions for Quality of Life, Mental Health, and Hair Growth in Alopecia Areata and Scarring Alopecia. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(3), 964. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030964