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Therapeutic peptides in gerontology: mechanisms and applications for healthy aging.

Mavrych V, Shypilova I, Bolgova O.
Frontiers in aging · April 7, 2026
Plain-language summary

This comprehensive narrative review examines nine therapeutic peptides with proposed applications in healthy aging and age-related conditions: tirzepatide (metabolic dysfunction), epitalon (telomere biology), GHK-Cu (dermal regeneration), BPC-157 and TB-500 (tissue repair), Semax (neuroprotection), CJC-1295 and ipamorelin (growth hormone modulation), and bremelanotide (sexual function). The authors searched PubMed, Scopus, and regulatory databases through January 2026, selecting 20 primary sources based on relevance and methodological quality. The review found that FDA-approved agents such as tirzepatide and bremelanotide have robust safety and efficacy data from large-scale trials, while investigational peptides such as epitalon, BPC-157, and TB-500 show promising signals primarily from preclinical and limited clinical studies. The authors highlight significant knowledge gaps, including the absence of long-term safety data for non-approved peptides, undefined optimal dosing regimens, unknown combination therapy effects, and lack of validated biomarkers for monitoring efficacy. The authors conclude that while therapeutic peptides offer mechanistically diverse approaches to aging hallmarks, investigational agents require rigorous clinical trial validation before clinical adoption. As a narrative review, findings are subject to selection bias and do not represent a quantitative synthesis of evidence.

Why this grade: This is a narrative review synthesizing existing literature across multiple peptides and study types; it does not generate new primary human data and its conclusions are bounded by the quality of underlying sources.

Ask the literature about tirzepatide
Abstract

Background Peptide therapeutics represent an emerging frontier in gerontological medicine, targeting fundamental hallmarks of aging including metabolic dysfunction, telomere attrition, tissue repair impairment, and hormonal decline. Objective To comprehensively review the mechanisms, clinical applications, evidence base, and safety profiles of therapeutic peptides with demonstrated or potential applications in healthy aging and age-related conditions. Methods A comprehensive narrative review was conducted through systematic searches of PubMed, Scopus, and regulatory databases (FDA, WADA) from inception through January 2026. Search terms included "peptide therapeutics," "aging," "gerontology," "healthspan," combined with specific peptide names (tirzepatide, epitalon, GHK-Cu, BPC-157, TB-500, Semax, CJC-1295, ipamorelin, bremelanotide). Peer-reviewed articles, clinical trials, regulatory documents, and preclinical studies were evaluated. A total of 20 primary sources were selected based on relevance, methodological quality, and contribution to understanding peptide mechanisms and clinical outcomes in aging populations. Results Nine peptides were identified spanning diverse aging interventions: metabolic restoration (tirzepatide), telomere biology (epitalon), dermal regeneration (GHK-Cu), tissue repair (BPC-157, TB-500), neuroprotection (Semax), growth hormone modulation (CJC-1295, ipamorelin), and sexual function (bremelanotide). FDA-approved agents demonstrated robust safety profiles from large-scale trials. Non-approved peptides showed promising preclinical and limited clinical evidence but lack long-term safety data and systematic validation. Significant knowledge gaps include optimal dosing regimens, combination therapy effects, and biomarkers for monitoring efficacy. Conclusion Therapeutic peptides offer mechanistically diverse approaches to multiple aging hallmarks. While FDA-approved agents demonstrate clinical potential, investigational peptides require rigorous validation through well-designed clinical trials to establish safety and efficacy for healthspan extension.

Educational summary of published research — not medical advice. License: cc by. Full text is shown only where licensing permits.