Osteogenic effect of a gastric pentadecapeptide, BPC-157, on the healing of segmental bone defect in rabbits: a comparison with bone marrow and autologous cortical bone implantation.
Sebecić. B B; Nikolić. V V; Sikirić. P P; Seiwerth. S S; Sosa. T T; Patrlj. L L; Grabarević. Z Z; Rucman. R R; Petek. M M; Konjevoda. P P; Jadrijević. S S; Perović. D D; Slaj. M M
Key Findings
- Local or intramuscular BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg or even 10 ng/kg) significantly improved healing of a 0.8 cm radius bone defect in rabbits.
- The healing effect was comparable to that of autologous bone‑marrow injection or a cortical bone graft.
- No adverse reactions were reported in the treated animals across all dosing regimens.
Practical Outcomes
- BPC‑157 shows promise as a bone‑healing agent, suggesting it could one day be used to support fracture repair or surgical bone defects. However, the evidence is limited to an animal model, and human dosing, safety, and efficacy are still unknown. Until clinical data emerge, biohackers should treat this as an interesting lead rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
In a rabbit study, the stomach‑derived peptide BPC‑157 helped bone defects heal faster and better, doing about as well as giving the animals their own bone marrow or a bone graft. The peptide worked whether it was injected right into the bone or given into the muscle, and even very low doses showed benefit without any obvious side effects.
Abstract
Gastrectomy often results in increased likelihood of osteoporosis, metabolic aberration, and risk of fracture, and there is a need for a gastric peptide with osteogenic activity. A novel stomach pentadecapeptide, BPC-157, improves wound and fracture healing in rats in addition to having an angiogenic effect. Therefore, in the present study, using a segmental osteoperiosteal bone defect (0.8 cm, in the middle of the left radius) that remained incompletely healed in all control rabbits for 6 weeks (assessed in 2 week intervals), pentadecapeptide BPC-157 was further studied (either percutaneously given locally [10 microg/kg body weight] into the bone defect, or applied intramuscularly [intermittently, at postoperative days 7, 9, 14, and 16 at 10 microg/kg body weight] or continuously [once per day, postoperative days 7-21 at 10 microg or 10 ng/kg body weight]). For comparison, rabbits percutaneously received locally autologous bone marrow (2 mL, postoperative day 7). As standard treatment, immediately after its formation, the bone defect was filled with an autologous cortical graft. Saline-treated (2 mL intramuscularly [i.m.] and 2 mL locally into the bone defect), injured animals were used as controls. Pentadecapeptide BPC-157 significantly improved the healing of segmental bone defects. For instance, upon radiographic assessment, the callus surface, microphotodensitometry, quantitative histomorphometry (10 microg/kg body weight i.m. for 14 days), or quantitative histomorphometry (10 ng/kg body weight i.m. for 14 days) the effect of pentadecapeptide BPC-157 was shown to correspond to improvement after local application of bone marrow or autologous cortical graft. Moreover, a comparison of the number of animals with unhealed defects (all controls) or healed defects (complete bony continuity across the defect site) showed that besides pentadecapeptide intramuscular application for 14 days (i.e., local application of bone marrow or autologous cortical graft), also following other pentadecapeptide BPC-157 regimens (local application, or intermittent intramuscular administration), the number of animals with healed defect was increased. Hopefully, in the light of the suggested stomach significance for bone homeostasis, the possible relevance of this pentadecapeptide BPC-157 effect (local or intramuscular effectiveness, lack of unwanted effects) could be a basis for methods of choice in the future management of healing impairment in humans, and requires further investigation.
Study Information
pubmed
1999
10.1016/s8756-3282(98)00180-x