Melanotropic peptides: more than just 'Barbie drugs' and 'sun-tan jabs'?
Langan. E A EA; Nie. Z Z; Rhodes. L E LE
Key Findings
- Melanotan I/II are sold online and used off‑label for tanning, but they are unregulated and may contain impurities.
- Needle sharing with these products raises the risk of blood‑borne infections and can spread viruses.
- These peptides can darken existing skin spots, complicating detection of melanoma or other lesions.
- The approved analogue afamelanotide is in Phase II/III trials for photoprotection in photosensitive patients.
Practical Outcomes
- Avoid self‑injecting unregulated melanotan I/II due to infection and impurity risks. If you notice unexpected tanning or rapid darkening of moles, tell a dermatologist they might be from these peptides. Keep an eye on the development of afamelanotide as a potentially safer, clinically tested option for UV protection, but it’s not yet ready for personal use.
Summary
People are buying and injecting unregulated melanotan I or II to get a tan without sun, but this can expose them to dirty needles, unknown impurities, and can hide skin problems, making diagnosis harder. A safer, regulated version called afamelanotide is being tested for protecting skin from UV damage, but it’s not yet widely available.
Abstract
While ultraviolet radiation (UVR) is a major cause of skin ageing and carcinogenesis, public pursuit of a novel tanning strategy circumventing the need for UVR is increasingly reported in the media and scientific press. This involves the subcutaneous self-administration of unregulated products labelled as melanotan I and/or II, synthetic analogues of α-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-MSH), as obtained via the internet, tanning salons and gyms. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Authority has recently raised awareness of the public health risk of transmission of blood-borne viruses from the needle sharing that may occur, and of the potential impurity of these products. Dermatologists should also be aware that these agents can complicate the clinical presentation of patients with pigmented lesions; their use may be suspected in unexpectedly tanned individuals with rapidly pigmenting naevi. Meanwhile, the regulated α-MSH analogue afamelanotide (Clinuvel Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Melbourne, Australia) is showing promise for its photoprotective potential, and is undergoing phase II and III clinical trials in people with photosensitivity disorders and those prone to nonmelanoma skin cancer. The photoprotective and other biological effects of α-MSH analogues await full determination.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-06-09T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2133.2010.09891.x
67
36