Finasteride vs RAD-140
FDA Approved vs Emerging
avoid Mechanism-based · 53% Both Finasteride and RAD-140 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
Finasteride RAD-140
Weight 372.54 Da 393.83 Da
Half-life 6-8 hours (DHT suppression persists ~24 hours) ~60 hours
Type Synthetic 4-azasteroid compound Nonsteroidal selective androgen receptor modulator (C20H16ClN5O2)
Key Benefits
Finasteride
01 Reduces scalp DHT by approximately 66% at 1mg daily
02 Slows or stops hair loss progression in roughly 90% of men
03 Produces visible hair regrowth in approximately 48% of men within 1-2 years
04 FDA-approved with over 25 years of clinical use and long-term safety data
05 Convenient once-daily oral dosing with no injections required
06 Well-characterized side effect profile with low incidence of adverse events
07 Can be combined with minoxidil for enhanced efficacy
RAD-140
01 Potent anabolic activity in muscle tissue with high oral bioavailability
02 Tissue-selective action sparing the prostate and other androgen-sensitive organs
03 No aromatization to estrogen (no estrogen-related side effects such as water retention or gynecomastia)
04 No conversion to DHT (reduced risk of hair loss and prostate stimulation compared to testosterone)
05 Long half-life (~60 hours) permitting convenient once-daily oral dosing
06 Neuroprotective properties observed in preclinical models
07 Increased lean body mass and reduced fat mass in preclinical studies
Side Effects
Finasteride
Decreased libido (reported in 1.8% of men in clinical trials vs 1.3% placebo)
Erectile dysfunction (reported in 1.3% vs 0.7% placebo)
Decreased ejaculate volume (reported in 0.8% vs 0.4% placebo)
RAD-140
Testosterone suppression (dose-dependent, occurs in virtually all users by week 4-6)
Liver enzyme elevation (ALT, AST increases reported in clinical and anecdotal data)
Hair shedding (temporary, typically resolves after discontinuation)
Headaches (most common in the first 1-2 weeks, often transient)
Nausea (mild, usually with initial doses or on an empty stomach)
Lipid disruption (HDL suppression, LDL elevation)
Mild insomnia or sleep disturbance
Reduced libido and mood changes related to testosterone suppression
Contraindications
Women who are pregnant or may become pregnant (finasteride is teratogenic and can cause abnormalities of external genitalia in a male fetus; even handling crushed tablets poses a risk)
Women who are breastfeeding
Known hypersensitivity to finasteride or any component of the formulation
Severe hepatic impairment (finasteride is metabolized by the liver)
Pediatric patients (not indicated for use in children)
Pre-existing liver disease or elevated liver enzymes at baseline
Hormone-sensitive cancers (prostate cancer, certain breast cancers not being treated under clinical supervision)
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 safety data for this population)
Research Evidence
Finasteride RAD-140
Status FDA Approved Emerging
References 5 studies 5 studies
Latest — July 2020
FDA Approved Yes No
This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.