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What’s behind the push to make peptide therapies more available?

What’s behind the push to make peptide therapies more available?

Federal regulators are considering allowing compounding pharmacies to manufacture several peptides that are currently popular with consumers. George Frey/Bloomberg/Getty Images hide title toggle title George Frey/Bloomberg/Getty Images Every day, Dr. Alexander Weber faces another round of questions about peptides and whether trendy therapies can help his patients recover from sports injuries or surgeries. He doesn’t

Federal regulators are considering allowing compounding pharmacies to manufacture several peptides that are currently popular with consumers.

Federal regulators are considering allowing compounding pharmacies to manufacture several peptides that are currently popular with consumers.

George Frey/Bloomberg/Getty Images


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George Frey/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Every day, Dr. Alexander Weber faces another round of questions about peptides and whether trendy therapies can help his patients recover from sports injuries or surgeries.

He doesn’t offer them in his practice as an orthopedic surgeon, but he shares what research shows about how well they really work.

“My usual response is that we just don’t have enough data,” says Weber, chief of sports medicine at the University of Southern California.

“The anecdotal evidence, even from the patients I see, is that they feel these injectables help them, but we just need to study it,” he adds. Weber authored a review of the research, published earlier this year, and noted the lack of evidence supporting its clinical use.

However, the medical establishment’s words of warning appear to have done little to quench the public’s appetite for these therapies, which have not undergone the large-scale trials necessary to gain approval from the Food and Drug Administration.

They are widely promoted in wellness and longevity circles for injury recovery, muscle growth, skin health, metabolism, and more. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. extolled their benefits in an interview with Joe Rogan earlier this year and promised to reverse Biden-era restrictions that have prevented compounding pharmacies in the U.S. from manufacturing them.

In fact, the restrictions have relegated the substances to a gray market, fueled by foreign suppliers, raising new safety concerns as users inject unauthorized substances.

However, the era of peptide bans could soon be over.

Later this month, a new panel of outside experts appointed by the FDA will make recommendations on whether seven peptides, including some of the most popular injectables like TB-500, BPC-157 and MOTs-C, should be added to a list that gives compounding pharmacies the green light to, again, manufacture the products.

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