Oral Collagen Improves Hair Appearance
Evidence-led white paper derived from the 2024 peer-reviewed Wiley paper on the AC clinical trial.
Executive Summary
This white paper asks whether the trial supports a hair benefit claim and, if so, what kind. The strongest answer is that daily use of a Collagen supplement improved clinically graded hair appearance and improved user-reported thickness and smoothness. Hair healthy appearance improved 31.9% in the active group versus 9.4% in placebo (p < 0.01). By week 12, 66.7% of users reported thicker-feeling hair versus 44.2% in placebo (p = 0.02), and 77.1% reported smoother-feeling hair versus 55.8% in placebo (p < 0.01).
The important discipline point is that total hairs counted increased directionally by 27.6% versus placebo, but this result was not statistically significant. The evidence therefore supports a stronger appearance-quality story than a robust hair-growth story.
Key Outcomes
| Metric | Result | What it means | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinically graded hair appearance | Clinically graded hair appearance | 31.9% improvement in the active group versus 9.4% in placebo (p < 0.01). | Hair looked healthier by expert grading after daily use. |
| User-perceived quality | User-perceived quality | Thicker-feeling hair: 66.7% versus 44.2% (p = 0.02); smoother-feeling hair: 77.1% versus 55.8% (p < 0.01). | Participants noticed changes in feel and appearance, not just investigators. |
| Hair count | Hair count | 27.6% increase versus placebo, but non-significant. | The study does not support a strong claim of proven hair-number increase. |
Study Snapshot
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| Study design | Study design | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled 12-week clinical trial run under Good Clinical Practice. |
| Participants | Participants | 140 adults enrolled, 130 completed; age 40-60 years; Fitzpatrick I-VI; 90% female / 10% male. |
| Intervention | Intervention | Absolute Collagen supplement providing 8000 mg hydrolysed marine collagen plus 60 mg vitamin C, taken daily or every 48 hours. |
| Core assessments | Core assessments | Confocal microscopy and high-resolution ultrasound of collagen fibers, corneometer hydration, cutometer elasticity, profilometry of wrinkles, expert visual grading, trichoscopy, and self-perception questionnaires. |
Scientific Angle
The most credible hair story in the trial is about appearance quality and user-perceived texture, not a hard claim of statistically proven hair-count increase.
Discussion
Hair benefit claims often become inflated because appearance and count are blurred together. This study makes it possible to separate them. The appearance story is meaningful and statistically supported. The count story is interesting but not conclusive.
Mechanistically, it is plausible that improved scalp condition and broader connective-tissue or surface quality could influence how hair presents visually. However, the trial does not prove a direct follicular growth mechanism. The best interpretation is that daily supplementation was associated with healthier-looking and better-feeling hair within the study window.
From a communications standpoint, this is still a valuable paper. Many audiences are interested in whether hair appears thicker, smoother, or healthier long before they ask about hard hair-growth claims. This evidence base supports that softer but still meaningful story with better discipline than most beauty content.
Limitations and Evidence Discipline
- The hair-count result was non-significant and should not be overstated.
- Hair assessments came from a smaller trichoscopy subset and expert grading scale.
- The study duration may be short relative to stronger hair-cycle outcomes such as robust growth or density change.
Conclusion
“The trial supports a credible hair-appearance story: healthier-looking, smoother, and thicker-feeling hair after daily use. It does not yet support a hard claim of statistically proven hair-count increase.”
Source note: derived from the peer-reviewed 2024 clinical paper only; no unsupported external claims have been added.
Reilly, David M., Kynaston, Liane, Naseem, Salma, Proudman, Eva, Laceby, Darcy, A Clinical Trial Shows Improvement in Skin Collagen, Hydration, Elasticity, Wrinkles, Scalp, and Hair Condition following 12-Week Oral Intake of a Supplement Containing Hydrolysed Collagen, Dermatology Research and Practice, 2024, 8752787, 12 pages, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1155/2024/8752787