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BPC-157

Body Protection Compound-157, PL-14736, Pentadecapeptide BPC 157

Quick Stats
Studies 196
Trials 1
Score 4
2008 pubmed

Pentadecapeptide BPC 157, in clinical trials as a therapy for inflammatory bowel disease (PL14736), is effective in the healing of colocutaneous fistulas in rats: role of the nitric oxide-system.

Klicek. Robert R; Sever. Marko M; Radic. Bozo B; Drmic. Domagoj D; Kocman. Ivan I; Zoricic. Ivan I; Vuksic. Tihomir T; Ivica. Mihovil M; Barisic. Ivan I; Ilic. Spomenko S; Berkopic. Lidija L; Vrcic. Hrvoje H; Brcic. Luka L; Blagaic. Alenka Boban AB; Coric. Marijana M; Brcic. Iva I; Rokotov. Dinko Stancic DS; Anic. Tomislav T; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P

Key Findings

  • BPC‑157 dramatically accelerated healing of colocutaneous fistulas in rats.
  • The peptide was effective both when taken orally (in drinking water) and when injected intraperitoneally.
  • Its healing benefits persisted despite inhibition of nitric‑oxide production, indicating a NO‑independent mechanism.
  • Standard treatments (sulphasalazine) were only modestly effective, and corticosteroids worsened wound healing.

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑directed health optimizers, BPC‑157 appears to be a promising oral or injectable option for supporting gut and tissue repair, especially after surgery or during inflammatory bowel issues. The study suggests low‑dose regimens (microgram‑per‑kg range) are effective and that combining it with nitric‑oxide modulators isn’t necessary. Existing human safety data further supports its experimental use.

Summary

In a rat study, the peptide BPC‑157 helped the colon and skin wounds close faster, whether the peptide was given in drinking water or by injection. It worked even when the body’s nitric‑oxide system was blocked, and it performed better than the common drug sulphasalazine, while steroids actually made healing worse.

Abstract

We focused on the therapeutic effect of the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and how its action is related to nitric oxide (NO) in persistent colocutaneous fistula in rats (at 5 cm from anus, colon defect of 5 mm, skin defect of 5 mm); this peptide has been shown to be safe in clinical trials for inflammatory bowel disease (PL14736) and safe for intestinal anstomosis therapy. BPC 157 (10 microg/kg, 10 ng/kg) was applied i) in drinking water until the animals were sacrificed at post-operative day 1, 3, 5, 7, 14, 21, and 28; or ii) once daily intraperitoneally (first application 30 min following surgery, last 24 h before sacrifice) alone or with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (5 mg/kg), L-arginine (200 mg/kg), and their combinations. Sulphasalazine (50 mg/kg) and 6-alpha-methylprednisolone (1 mg/kg) were given once daily intraperitoneally. BPC 157 accelerated parenterally or perorally the healing of colonic and skin defect, leading to the suitable closure of the fistula, macro/microscopically, biomechanically, and functionally (larger water volume sustained without fistula leaking). L-NAME aggravated the healing failure of colocutaneous fistulas, skin, and colon wounds (L-NAME groups). L-Arginine was effective only with blunted NO generation (L-NAME + L-arginine groups) but not without (L-arginine groups). All of the BPC 157 beneficial effects remained unchanged with blunted NO-generation (L-NAME + BPC 157 groups) and with NO substrate (L-arginine + BPC 157 groups) as well as L-NAME and L-arginine co-administration (L-NAME + L-arginine + BPC 157 groups). Sulphasalazine was only moderately effective, and corticosteroid even had an aggravating effect.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

DOI

10.1254/jphs.fp0072161