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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
2018 pubmed

Evaluation of growth hormone-releasing peptide-2 for diagnosis of thyrotropin-producing pituitary adenomas.

Kageyama. Kazunori K; Sakihara. Satoru S; Kameda. Wataru W; Sugiyama. Aya A; Takayasu. Shinobu S; Terui. Ken K; Daimon. Makoto M

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑2 caused a >50% increase in TSH in only 2 of 5 patients with TSH‑producing adenomas.
  • One additional patient had a near‑significant (48%) rise, while the others showed little or no response.
  • After surgical removal of the tumor, GHRP‑2 no longer raised TSH, confirming the response was tumor‑related.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or self‑experimenters, this research does not provide actionable information for health optimization, dosing, or performance. It is mainly a clinical diagnostic study with limited relevance to everyday peptide use.

Summary

The study looked at whether giving the peptide GHRP‑2 can help diagnose a rare type of pituitary tumor that makes too much thyroid‑stimulating hormone. It found that only a few patients showed a big rise in hormone levels after the peptide, so it’s not a reliable test for most cases.

Abstract

Thyrotropin (TSH)-producing adenomas are a rare cause of hyperthyroidism and are a type of functional pituitary adenoma. The diagnosis of TSH-producing adenoma is a challenging problem in clinical endocrinology. Since growth hormone-releasing peptide-2 (GHRP-2) fails to induce TSH secretion in normal subjects, the effect of GHRP-2 on TSH levels was therefore examined in patients with TSH-producing adenomas. A total of 5 patients (4 women and 1 man) referred to our departments for further evaluation of pituitary hormones were followed-up using the GHRP-2, TSH-releasing hormone (TRH), octreotide, and bromocriptine tests to examine and evaluate TSH secretory dynamics in TSH-producing adenomas. Of 5 patients, 2 (40%) showed such a significant response, defined as a >50% increase in serum TSH level above baseline in the GHRP-2 test. Additionally, 1 patient showed a 48% increase in serum TSH level. In 1 patient whose adenoma was completely removed, basal serum concentrations of TSH were sufficiently suppressed after the operation, and serum TSH levels failed to increase in response to GHRP-2 administration. In 4 patients (80%), a poor response of serum TSH levels was observed in the TRH test. In 2 out of 5 patients (40%), serum TSH levels were significantly decreased following octreotide administration. No patient demonstrated a significant response to the bromocriptine test. In addition to TRH test, the GHRP-2 test as a potential diagnostic tool for TSH-producing pituitary adenomas.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-07-05T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1507/endocrj.ej17-0527