Peptide hormones: Review of current and emerging uses by nasal delivery.
Pontiroli. AE AE
Key Findings
- Peptide hormones are destroyed in the gut, so oral use isn’t viable
- Intranasal delivery is convenient and improves patient compliance
- Hexarelin shows strong effectiveness and is near market readiness via nasal spray
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re experimenting with peptides, consider intranasal administration as a practical alternative to injections, but note that hexarelin isn’t commercially available yet. Keep an eye on upcoming clinical trials and product releases for nasal hexarelin and other peptides like insulin or glucagon. When they appear, start with low doses and monitor response closely.
Summary
This review says most peptide hormones can’t be taken as pills, but spraying them into the nose works well and is easy to use. Some hormones like desmopressin and oxytocin are already sold for nasal use, and hexarelin – a growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide – looks especially promising for this route, though it isn’t on the market yet.
Abstract
The family of clinically available peptide hormones (PHs) is expanding in an exponential way, and advancement of knowledge of the basic mechanisms of action of PHs has led to multiplication of the possible clinical indications of already known PHs, and appears even more promising for still unknown PHs. A common obstacle to a full routine use of PHs is represented by the fact that PHs cannot be administered by the oral route, since they undergo digestion and inactivation in the gastrointestinal tract and a significant first pass metabolism in the liver. One alternative is represented by intranasal administration of PHs. The intranasal route of administration of PHs is also very attractive because of its convenience, which should assure a good compliance by patients. Luteinizing hormone releasing hormone, the analogues, desmopressin, oxytocin and salmon calcitonin are already marketed for intranasal administration; for salmon calcitonin, studies about bioavailability have been scanty in the past, but should be re-considered in order to fully explore its clinical benefit.Intranasal peptide hormones not yet on the market are insulin, glucagon, growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) and GHRP, GH and somatostatin, but the scenario is likely to change in a short period of time. Hexarelin seems very effective and is at a promising stage of development; also, glucagon appears mature enough to undergo extensive clinical evaluation and possibly marketing. The concern is why other peptides have not been further evaluated, as is the case for somatostatin and its analogues.
Study Information
pubmed
1998
1998-01-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/s0169-409x(97)00062-8