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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 3
2000 pubmed

Kinetics and disposition of hexarelin, a peptidic growth hormone secretagogue, in rats.

Roumi. M M; Marleau. S S; du Souich. P P; Maggi. T T; Deghenghi. R R; Ong. H H

Key Findings

  • IV half‑life ≈ 76 min; systemic clearance ≈ 7.6 ml/min/kg; volume of distribution ≈ 744 ml/kg.
  • Sub‑cutaneous bioavailability ≈ 64% and no drug accumulation across doses.
  • Primary elimination route is biliary (≈60% of dose), with 90% of biliary and 71% of urinary excretion as unchanged peptide.

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, hexarelin can be given sub‑cutaneously with decent absorption, so daily or every‑other‑day dosing is feasible. The ~1‑hour half‑life suggests timing of injections matters for peak effects. Because the peptide is mostly excreted unchanged, it appears resistant to rapid enzymatic breakdown, reducing concerns about immediate degradation.

Summary

In rats, the peptide hexarelin stays in the blood for about 1.3 hours after an IV dose and is well absorbed when injected under the skin, with about two‑thirds of the dose reaching the bloodstream. Most of the unchanged peptide is cleared through bile, and it’s relatively stable against breakdown.

Abstract

To document the disposition of hexarelin, a peptidyl growth hormone secretagogue, male Sprague-Dawley rats received a 5-microg/kg bolus i.v. dose or three single s.c. doses of 5, 10, and 50 microg/kg. To assess hexarelin tissue distribution and excretion, rats were given 1 microg/kg of [(3)H]hexarelin (9.4 Ci/mmol). Metabolism of [(3)H]hexarelin was assessed in bile duct-exteriorized rats given 50 microg/kg where radiolabeled hexarelin biliary and urinary excretion was quantified. After its i.v. injection, hexarelin displayed a half-life of 75.9 +/- 9.3 min, a systemic clearance of 7.6 +/- 0.7 ml/min/kg, and a volume of distribution at steady state of 744 +/- 81 ml/kg. After s.c. administration, the area under the curve (477-3826 pmol.min/ml) estimated with increasing doses confirmed the absence of hexarelin accumulation. Clearance/F (12-15 ml/min/kg) and volume of distribution/F (1208-1222 ml/kg) were dose independent. Hexarelin bioavailability given s.c. was 64%. The highest radioactivity levels were detected in the kidney, liver, and duodenum. The pattern of hexarelin excretion was similar after i.v. or s.c. administrations. Total radioactivity in bile, urine, and feces corresponded to 60, 22, and 10% of the dose, respectively. Of the radioactivity excreted in bile and urine, 90 and 71% was unchanged hexarelin, respectively. These results suggest that: 1) the kinetics of hexarelin appear to be first order up to 50 microg/kg; 2) hexarelin is rapidly absorbed after s.c. administration; 3) biliary excretion is the primary route of hexarelin elimination; and 4) the high recovery of unchanged peptide in bile and urine demonstrates hexarelin stability toward proteolytic enzymes.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2000