Dutasteride vs LGD-4033

FDA Approved vs Moderate Research
avoid Mechanism-based · 64% Both Dutasteride and LGD-4033 carry hepatotoxic risk. Combining hepatotoxic compounds significantly increases liver damage potential. If unavoidable, include liver support (TUDCA/NAC) and monitor ALT/AST frequently.

Molecular Data

Dutasteride LGD-4033
Weight 528.53 Da 338.25 Da
Half-life ~5 weeks (extremely long; active metabolite accumulation over months) ~24-36 hours
Type Synthetic 4-azasteroid compound (dual 5-alpha reductase inhibitor) Nonsteroidal selective androgen receptor modulator (C14H12F6N2O)

Key Benefits

Dutasteride
01 Inhibits both Type I and Type II 5-alpha reductase for more complete DHT suppression
02 Reduces serum DHT by approximately 90%, compared to 70% with finasteride
03 Head-to-head trials show superior hair count improvements over finasteride at 12 and 24 weeks
04 FDA-approved for BPH with well-established long-term safety data
05 Extremely long half-life allows for flexible dosing schedules (daily or 3x per week)
06 Convenient once-daily oral dosing with no injections required
07 Can be combined with minoxidil for enhanced hair loss treatment
LGD-4033
01 Strongest SARM for lean muscle mass accrual, with clinical trial data supporting dose-dependent increases in lean body mass
02 Tissue-selective action with minimal stimulation of the prostate and other androgen-sensitive tissues
03 Clinical evidence of improved physical function (leg press strength, stair-climbing speed) in hip fracture patients
04 No aromatization to estrogen (no estrogen-related water retention or gynecomastia at the receptor level)
05 No conversion to DHT (reduced risk of androgenic hair loss and prostate stimulation compared to testosterone)
06 Convenient once-daily oral dosing due to 24-36 hour half-life
07 Phase 2 clinical data available, providing a stronger evidence base than most other SARMs

Side Effects

Dutasteride
Decreased libido (reported in 3-5% of men; somewhat higher incidence than finasteride due to greater DHT suppression)
Erectile dysfunction (reported in 3-5%; more frequently reported than with finasteride)
Decreased ejaculate volume (reported in 1-2%)
Gynecomastia or breast tenderness (reported in approximately 1-2%)
LGD-4033
Testosterone suppression (dose-dependent; more suppressive than Ostarine at equivalent doses, occurs in most users by week 4-6)
Water retention (non-estrogenic mechanism, typically mild to moderate, contributes to scale weight increase)
HDL cholesterol reduction (dose-dependent lipid impact observed in clinical trials)
Headaches (most common in the first 1-2 weeks, usually transient)
Fatigue or lethargy (related to testosterone suppression, typically becomes noticeable mid-cycle)
Reduced libido (related to HPG axis suppression, severity varies by dose and individual)
Contraindications
Women who are pregnant or may become pregnant (dutasteride is teratogenic and can cause abnormalities of external genitalia in a male fetus; even handling damaged capsules poses a risk due to skin absorption)
Women who are breastfeeding
Known hypersensitivity to dutasteride, other 5-alpha reductase inhibitors, or any component of the formulation
Severe hepatic impairment (dutasteride is extensively metabolized by the liver via CYP3A4)
Pediatric patients (not indicated for use in children)
Co-administration with strong CYP3A4 inhibitors (e.g., ritonavir, ketoconazole) may significantly increase dutasteride levels
Pre-existing liver disease or elevated liver enzymes at baseline
Hormone-sensitive cancers (prostate cancer or other androgen-driven malignancies)
Pregnancy or potential pregnancy (teratogenic risk from androgen receptor agonism)
Breastfeeding
Age under 25 (incomplete endocrine system maturation and higher risk of HPG axis disruption)
Concurrent use of hepatotoxic medications without medical supervision
Known cardiovascular disease (insufficient long-term safety data for this population)
History of significant lipid abnormalities (LGD-4033 suppresses HDL)

Research Evidence

Dutasteride LGD-4033
Status FDA Approved Moderate Research
References 5 studies 5 studies
Latest 2018
FDA Approved Yes No

This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.