Male pattern balding is a common androgen-dependent trait. The frequency of
balding in the population increases with age but not all men develop baldi
ng even in old age. It is well-known that balding tends to run in families
but the nature of the underlying genetic predisposition and the mode of inh
eritance are unknown. In this study we examined scalp hair status across a
wide age range in 572 men and took family histories of balding in first deg
ree male relatives. The results confirmed that there is an increased freque
ncy of balding in the fathers of young bald men and a high relative risk of
balding in young subjects with a balding father but these effects declined
with increasing subject age. In contrast, there was a pronounced increase
in the frequency of non-balding in the fathers of non-bald elderly subjects
and an increased relative risk of non-balding in elderly subjects with a n
on-bald father, which were not evident in younger subjects. Analysis of the
frequencies of balding and non-balding in the brothers of balding and non-
balding elderly men, categorised by paternal hair status, failed to show th
at either balding or non-balding is due to the action of a single gene. Nev
ertheless, our results indicate that there is a genetic influence on baldin
g in young men and on non-balding in elderly men. It is possible that the s
ame genes are responsible for determining predisposition to balding and to
non-balding but, at this stage, we cannot assume that this is necessarily t
he case. Genetic analysis of balding in young men is complicated by the fac
t that the destiny of hair status in non-bald siblings is unknown. This dif
ficulty is partly overcome by studying non-balding in elderly men where bal
ding and non-balding in similarly aged siblings are more fully expressed, w
hich may make this age group a better target for future studies in this fie
ld.