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I have received a lot of interest from others on here in my involvement with the Xeljanz trials at Yale.
I thought it would be nice for everyone if I documented my progress on here.
Xeljanz is a Jak3 inhibitor and is believed to work with alopecia by turning off the distress signal relayed by the hair follicle to the attacking immune system which is the cause of the hairs falling out. Xeljanz comes in a strength of 5mg per pill and a full box contains 60 tablets. The recommended dosage for arthritis is 1 tablet in the morning and another in the evening each day.
The trial is set in a series of stages and there are requirements before participating. These include monthly visits and blood tests every 2 weeks. Dr Brett King is absolutely fantastic and is an inspiration to me. His positivity and enthusiasm gives me the much needed hope I have craved for over a decade. I have been put on a low dose to start with which is 1 tablet every other day. My dosage has now been increased to 1 tablet every day and next month it could be increased to 2 tablets per day depending on the results.
I have completed my first month and have already noticed my alopecia has stabilised . I have not lost any existing hairs. In addition to this I have seen little hairs growing in my chest area as well as eyebrows. Fingers crossed! To date, I have experienced no side effects.
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What if the cream gets into your eyes accidentally? Sp06, did you ask Dr. King if one can get a prescription to have a compounding pharmacy turn Xeljanz pills into a cream? I would think many people would want to pursue this option instead of taking it orally.
Yes! Please let me know if you hear anything about getting a compounding pharmacy to create a cream form. I would love to try it as a cream. WAY less risk since it's only a local suppressant!
So he says it's okay to go to a compounding pharmacist now to crush the pills into cream form???
I personally live a very full and happy life. I'm actually a swimmer and I just go to the pool bald every time. I'm bald and that really sucked when my hair first fell out but I went to a therapist for a while when it did so I could mourn the loss of the hair properly and move on with my life. Although it's a lifelong thing, I'm doing really well now and I honestly don't think having my hair back would affect my quality of life much. Only real benefits I see for myself are:
1. More choice of the shallower guys when dating (not a great benefit- plenty of shallow guys don't care about my not having hair anyway and I'm not interested in them regardless)
2. I won't have to wear wigs for meetings.
While my risks would be:
1. Traveling would be very dangerous (I'm going to backpack through Europe for a month in May, then plan to backpack through Australia the next year, Iceland the year after and I hope to see every country in my lifetime)
2. There's a chance I could get one or more of many different diseases.
I completely understand your wish to get your hair back (I'd like mine back as well).. I just think it's too risky for me
Yeah, I'm not saying nobody else should not take the drug, I just am not sure people know the risks. To me it's an obvious "no" which is why I made the topic. I'm not sure what other people are seeing that I'm not.. or on the other hand what I'm seeing that others are not. I like these discussions... especially with the alopecia community because I don't know alopecians in person. This makes me feel connected with other baldies ^_^
Less hydrodynamic drag while swimming - I suppose we have that going for us.
People have been naturally conditioned to prefer others with hair, and while male pattern baldness is typically perceived as natural, AA is simply a different animal. It has more to do with "unhealthy" appearance than being aesthetically pleasing. I admit, I prefer women with natural hair and I am almost certainly not a shallow person. This is just the way things are in the world :(.
And btw, you are unlikely to catch any nasty bugs while backpacking in Europe, Iceland, or Australia. The real danger is being stuck on an plane in tight quarters for half a day.
You are young and pretty and content with your life, so maybe you can wait it out until a safer treatment becomes available. But I am guessing the vast majority of people on here are not happy with their life (hence "AlopeciaDestroyedMyLife") and are are desperate for a cure and a chance to get on with their life. I suppose that's what it ultimately comes down to - whether or not you made peace with your loss of hair and are content with your new life.
Nah man, I'd still say that's shallow. It's okay, though. I'd say we're all shallow about specific things- that's human nature. I've never cared if a guy had hair or not (and like I said I had a ton of hair) but I've always been shallow about a guy being overweight. I would never date a guy a few pounds too heavy.
Yeah, that's true- the plane ride would be tough. I wouldn't want to risk it in general, though. It's "unlikely" but it's more likely than the likelihood was to get alopecia!
And yeah I see that but I've always thought that professional help would be more useful than getting the hair back for the big issue of self esteem. This is most DEFINITELY going to be an unpopular opinion here but I'd say it's like getting a nose job for a big ole wonky nose vs. going to a therapist to accept the nose you have. Getting a nose job is even cheaper and lower risk than Xeljanz though. I agree that it's what it comes down to. I just want everyone to be happy. It would definitely be easier if more people were aware of alopecia and didn't ostracize people for it!
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