An oral drug just grew 30 extra hairs per square centimetre. Here is what that tells us about where hair loss actually lives.
Veradermics just published Phase 3 results for VDPHL01 — an oral pill that produced 30 to 33 additional hairs per square centimetre over six months, compared to seven in the placebo group. It works systemically. Not on the scalp. Which is exactly the point.
The most significant thing about a pill that grows hair is not the number. It is the delivery route. The hair loss was always a systemic problem. The treatments are finally becoming systemic too.
The dominant model of hair loss treatment for the past thirty years has been topical: apply something to the scalp, hope it reaches the follicle, measure what happens. Minoxidil is rubbed in twice daily. Finasteride is systemic but was developed as a prostate drug. The thinking has been that hair loss happens on the scalp, so the scalp is where you treat it.
Veradermics just published Phase 3 results for a pill.
VDPHL01, taken orally once or twice daily, produced 30 to 33 additional hairs per square centimetre over six months in trial participants. The placebo group grew approximately seven. That gap — 30 versus 7, achieved through systemic delivery — is one of the cleaner efficacy signals in recent hair loss trial data. And the most significant thing about it is not the number. It is the route.
Why Oral Matters
What systemic delivery says about where hair loss lives.
A topical treatment operates on the assumption that the problem is local — that the follicle needs something applied to it directly, and the rest of the body is largely irrelevant. This model has always been incomplete. This week's research has mapped exactly why: the gut microbiome is causally linked to androgenetic alopecia. Cortisol stored in the hair shaft reflects months of systemic stress. Follicle dormancy is a cellular energy problem driven by mitochondrial metabolism. The scalp senescence cascade is driven by systemic inflammatory signals originating partly in the gut.
A drug that works when swallowed — that reaches the follicle through the bloodstream, through the same circulatory pathway that carries hormones, nutrients, inflammatory signals, and metabolic substrates — is confirming what the biology has been saying: the follicle is downstream of the whole body. Treating it locally while the systemic drivers continue unaddressed is like mopping the floor without turning off the tap.
30 to 33 additional hairs per square centimetre over six months is a meaningful clinical result. For context, minoxidil typically produces 10 to 15 additional hairs per square centimetre at six months in trials. VDPHL01's result is approximately double — through an oral route, without scalp application, without the rebound loss that occurs when minoxidil is discontinued.
The mechanism of VDPHL01 has not been fully published. What is published is that it works systemically. The follicle responded to something delivered through the blood — confirming that the blood is the right delivery route for meaningful follicle change.
The Botanical Parallel
The systemic delivery route that has always been available.
Laritelle has always been built around the premise that the follicle is downstream of the whole body — that what reaches it through the blood matters as much as what is applied to the surface. This is why the formulas address hormonal balance, circulation, cortisol, and the inflammatory environment simultaneously. It is why the daily scalp ritual is structured as a whole-body intervention delivered through the most intimate and repeatable act available.
The oral drug confirms the premise. It does not replace the approach.
Topical application of botanical actives at therapeutic concentration delivers compounds to the follicle through two routes simultaneously: direct absorption through the follicular opening, and systemic absorption through the scalp's rich vascular network into the bloodstream. Ginger's 6-gingerol, rosemary's rosmarinic acid, lavender's linalool — all of these cross the skin barrier and enter circulation, reaching follicles across the entire scalp through the same route VDPHL01 uses.
A well-formulated topical botanical oil is not purely topical. It is a partially systemic delivery system — which is one of the reasons that the clinical results for rosemary oil (matching minoxidil at six months) are more remarkable than a purely surface-level mechanism would predict.
The four-minute scalp massage at the centre of the Laritelle ritual is not just a mechanical intervention. It is a circulatory one — increasing local blood flow, improving the delivery of every compound that reaches the follicle through the bloodstream. If VDPHL01 works because it reaches the follicle via the blood, then the scalp massage optimises that delivery system: more blood flow means more of whatever the blood is carrying arrives at the follicle.
The massage and the oral drug are addressing the same delivery route. One enhances the circulatory environment. The other uses it to deliver a therapeutic compound. They are not competing approaches. They are complementary ones.
The blood delivers more than drugs. It delivers hormones — estrogen, DHT, cortisol, thyroid hormones, IGF-1. The follicle is bathed in whatever the bloodstream is carrying. An oral drug that works through this route is succeeding because the blood is the right medium for reaching and influencing the follicle. The same logic applies to every systemic intervention that changes what the blood carries: reducing cortisol through daily aromatherapy, supporting estrogen metabolism through gut microbiome health, modulating DHT through topical 5-alpha reductase inhibitors that absorb into circulation. All of these are working on the same circulatory pathway that VDPHL01 has now demonstrated is the correct target.
The Honest Assessment
What VDPHL01 is — and what it still requires.
The Phase 3 result is strong. An oral drug producing double the minoxidil result at six months, through a systemic delivery route, with a cleaner trial signal than most hair loss pharmaceuticals have produced, is genuinely significant progress.
What remains unknown: the mechanism, the long-term safety profile, the rebound question (does hair loss return when the drug is stopped, as it does with minoxidil?), the cost and accessibility once approved, and whether the results replicate in women — who, as the million-user dataset confirmed, represent the majority of those affected by hair loss but are consistently undertrialled in hair loss pharmaceutical research.
VDPHL01 will not be available by prescription this year. Regulatory approval, if it proceeds, is likely 18 to 24 months away at minimum. The systemic approach it validates, however, is available today — through every daily practice that changes what the blood carries to the follicle.
What this week's research, taken together, has established.
Monday through Sunday, this week mapped hair loss across six biological systems. Every single finding pointed in the same direction: hair loss is a systemic condition that requires systemic treatment. Not a product applied to the surface. A daily practice that changes the internal environment the follicle lives in.
VDPHL01 confirms this from the pharmaceutical direction. The oral route works because the blood is the right medium. The systemic approach is correct.
Laritelle has been building for this conclusion for years — not because anyone predicted a pill would validate the philosophy, but because the biology always pointed here. The follicle is downstream of everything. You treat it by changing what it is downstream of. One consistent, daily, botanical intervention at a time.
So does everything that matters.
The systemic ritual. Available today.
Every Laritelle formula reaches the follicle through the same circulatory pathway the latest oral drug has confirmed is the right route — daily, at therapeutic concentration, without waiting for regulatory approval.
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