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The peptide literature, summarized and graded.

Every paper distilled to a plain-language summary with an honest evidence grade — from strong human trials to animal-only signals. 2 papers indexed and counting.

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Filtered by #PT-141 · clear
InsufficientPreprint

Evaluation of Research Grade Peptides Marketed Directly to Consumers Reveals Extensive Variability in Purity and Measured Abundance

This study analyzed a large, publicly available independent testing dataset of 6,441 samples spanning fourteen peptide compounds sold through largely unregulated gray market channels directly to consumers. Compounds examined included BPC-157, semaglutide, tirzepatide, PT-141, TB-500, thymosin beta-4, and others marketed for purposes such as injury recovery, muscle growth, fat loss, and athletic performance. Researchers applied two quality acceptance frameworks — one approximating standards for 503A compounded medications and a stricter model reflecting FDA-approved drug production standards — to assess purity, measured abundance, and endotoxin burden. The study found that between 41.6% and 71.1% of samples failed to meet basic quality criteria depending on the framework applied, and measurable endotoxin contamination was detected in 15% of samples. Gray market peptides were consistently cheaper than FDA-approved alternatives, though cost differentials varied widely (e.g., 72.8% higher for tirzepatide vs. 3,850% higher for PT-141 when comparing FDA-approved options). The authors concluded that consumer-directed third-party testing improves transparency but captures only a fraction of the full safety profile relevant to patients self-administering injectable compounds. Key limitations include reliance on a secondary dataset not collected under controlled research conditions and the inability to assess many other safety dimensions beyond purity and endotoxin levels.

Unknown journal · Apr 2026DOI ↗
Insufficient

Bremelanotide

This entry reviews the available information on bremelanotide, a cyclic peptide (molecular weight ~1025 Da), specifically in the context of breastfeeding safety. The review notes a complete absence of published clinical data on bremelanotide use during lactation. The authors reason that, based on its physicochemical properties as a large cyclic peptide, transfer into breast milk is theoretically expected to be minimal. Furthermore, even if trace amounts were present in milk, oral absorption by a nursing infant would likely be negligible, as the peptide would probably be degraded by proteolytic enzymes in the infant's gastrointestinal tract. Despite this theoretical reassurance, the review concludes that caution is warranted during breastfeeding due to the lack of empirical data, with particular emphasis on vulnerability in newborn and preterm infants, whose gastrointestinal and hepatic systems are less mature. The primary limitation of this entry is that it is entirely inference-based, drawing on pharmacokinetic principles rather than any direct human or animal lactation studies. No measured milk concentration data, infant outcome data, or controlled observations are cited.

Unknown journal · Feb 2025Source ↗