Growth hormone release by the novel GH releasing peptide hexarelin in patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia.
Tolis. G G; Karydis. I I; Markousis. V V; Karagiorga. M M; Mesimeris. T T; Lenaerts. V V; Deghenghi. R R
Key Findings
- Hexarelin raised serum GH significantly more than GHRH 1‑29 (p<0.01)
- Both oral and IV hexarelin produced a rapid GH surge
- Study was limited to 18 transfused beta‑thalassemia patients, 11 of whom were short‑statured
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, hexarelin appears to be a very effective GH secretagogue, potentially useful for growth, muscle, or anti‑aging protocols, but the evidence is from a small, disease‑specific trial. Start with caution, use the 1 µg/kg IV dose as a reference point, and watch for more safety data before routine use.
Summary
Hexarelin, a short peptide, caused a much bigger spike in growth hormone than the standard GHRH drug when given to 18 beta‑thalassemia patients, even when taken by mouth. This suggests it’s a powerful GH‑boosting agent, but the study was tiny, only in a specific disease group, and didn’t look at long‑term safety.
Abstract
Patients with beta-thalassemia often present with abnormalities in growth and other endocrine functions. Growth hormone (GH) secretion is controlled via somatostatin and growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH). Recently, Hexarelin, a new potent GH secretagogue (His-D-2-Methyl-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2), was synthesized. Our study was designed to assess and compare its efficacy as a GH secretagogue to GHRH 1-29 in beta-thalassemia. Eighteen patients, regularly transfused and chelated, were studied; 11 were short statured. None had diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, hypopara-thyroidism or major organ failure. We measured GH at 0, 30, 60, 90, 120 min after GHRH 1-29 or Hexarelin administration. Hexarelin p.o. or i.v. evoked a brisk rise of serum GH which was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than that induced by GHRH 1-29 i.v. In conclusion, Hexarelin has greater GH releasing capacity than GHRH 1-29 at 1 microgram/kg i.v. and can thus be viewed as a potential therapeutic agent in GH deficient states.
Study Information
pubmed
1997
10.1515/jpem.1997.10.1.35