Comparison of the effects of growth hormone-releasing hormone and hexarelin, a novel growth hormone-releasing peptide-6 analog, on growth hormone secretion in humans with or without glucocorticoid excess.
Giustina. A A; Bussi. A R AR; Deghenghi. R R; Imbimbo. B B; Licini. M M; Poiesi. C C; Wehrenberg. W B WB
Key Findings
- GHRH alone caused a blunted GH response in subjects with chronic glucocorticoid excess.
- Hexarelin alone produced a strong GH rise comparable to that seen in normal controls.
- Hexarelin’s effect suggests it can overcome the high somatostatin tone caused by excess glucocorticoids.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers on steroids or with low GH, hexarelin may be a more effective secretagogue than GHRH. The study used a 100 µg IV bolus, so any real‑world protocol would need dose conversion (likely sub‑Q) and careful safety monitoring.
Summary
The study shows that a single IV dose of hexarelin (100 µg) can boost growth hormone levels in people whose GH release is suppressed by high steroid levels, doing so as well as in healthy volunteers, whereas the usual GH‑releasing hormone (GHRH) works poorly in that situation.
Abstract
The aim of our study was to investigate the effect of hexarelin, a novel GH-releasing peptide-6 analog, and GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) (alone or in combination) on GH secretion in adult patients with increased somatostatin tone due to chronic glucocorticoid excess. We studied seven adult patients undergoing long-term (no less than 6 months) immunosuppressive glucocorticoid treatment for non-endocrine diseases (six females and one male, age range 42-68 years) and one subject (female, age 31 years) with endogenous hypercortisolism due to adrenal adenoma. Six normal subjects (four females and two males) matched for sex and age with the patients and not undergoing any therapy served as controls. All the subjects underwent the following three tests in random order: (1) human GHRH (1-29)NH2 (100 micrograms in 1 ml saline) injected as an i.v. bolus at 0 min, (2) hexarelin (100 micrograms in 1 ml saline) injected as an i.v. bolus at 0 min and (3) hexarelin (100 micrograms in 1 ml of saline) plus GHRH (100 micrograms in 1 ml saline) injected as an i.v. bolus at 0 min. After GHRH alone the patients with glucocorticoid excess showed a blunted GH response as compared with normal subjects (median delta GH: 0.9, range 0-5.6 micrograms/l vs 7:1, range 0.3-14.9 micrograms/l). No significant differences were observed in the steroid-treated group with respect to normal subjects after hexarelin alone (median delta GH: 15.5, range 1.9-45.2 micrograms/l vs 17.9, range 5.5-53.9 micrograms/l).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Study Information
pubmed
1995
10.1677/joe.0.1460227