Characterization of distinct microbiota associated with androgenetic alopecia patients treated and untreated with platelet‐rich plasma (PRP)

Author:

Zhang Qian1,Wang Yanan2,Ran Cheng3,Zhou Yingmei4,Zhao Zigang5,Xu Tianhua3,Hou Hongwei16,Lu Yuan4

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Life Science Academy Beijing China

2. Department of Pathology Affiliated Hospital of Hebei University Baoding China

3. Department of Otolaryngology Affiliated Hospital of Hebei University Baoding China

4. Department of Dermatology Huazhong University of Science and Technology Union Shenzhen Hospital Shenzhen China

5. Department of Dermatology Hainan Hospital of PLA General Hospital Sanya China

6. Department of Chemical Engineering Tsinghua University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAndrogenic alopecia (AGA) is the most common type of hair loss in men, and there are many studies on the treatment of hair loss by platelet‐rich plasma (PRP). The human scalp contains a huge microbiome, but its role in the process of hair loss remains unclear, and the relationship between PRP and the microbiome needs further study. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of PRP treatment on scalp microbiota composition.MethodsWe performed PRP treatment on 14 patients with AGA, observed their clinical efficacy, and collected scalp swab samples before and after treatment. The scalp microflora of AGA patients before and after treatment was characterized by amplifying the V3‐V4 region of the 16 s RNA gene and sequencing for bacterial identification.ResultsThe results showed that PRP was effective in the treatment of AGA patients, and the hair growth increased significantly. The results of relative abundance analysis of microbiota showed that after treatment, g_Cutibacterium increased and g_Staphylococcus decreased, which played a stable role in scalp microbiota. In addition, g_Lawsonella decreased, indicating that the scalp oil production decreased after treatment.ConclusionsThe findings suggest that PRP may play a role in treating AGA through scalp microbiome rebalancing.

Publisher

Wiley

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