Advances in the detection of growth hormone releasing hormone synthetic analogs.
Memdouh. Siham S; Gavrilović. Ivana I; Ng. Kelsey K; Cowan. David D; Abbate. Vincenzo V
Key Findings
- 19 major in‑vitro metabolites of four GHRH analogs were identified
- A sensitive LC‑MS/MS method can detect parent peptides and metabolites at ≤1 ng/ml
- The method meets WADA’s required detection limits
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re considering sermorelin for performance or anti‑aging, be aware that modern testing can detect very low doses, which could be a risk for competitive athletes. The paper doesn’t provide dosing or safety advice, only detection capabilities.
Summary
The study shows that labs can now reliably spot tiny amounts of growth‑hormone‑releasing‑hormone (GHRH) peptides like sermorelin in urine, thanks to a new sensitive test that catches even 1 ng/ml. It doesn’t tell you how to use sermorelin for health, just that anti‑doping agencies are getting better at catching it.
Abstract
The administration of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) and its synthetic analogs is prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). Although there is evidence of their use, based on admissions and intelligence, they do not appear to have been found in anti-doping samples by WADA accredited laboratories. This might be due to their small concentration in urine and limited knowledge about their metabolism, especially for unapproved synthetic analogs. This study investigates the in vitro metabolism and detection of four of the larger GHRH synthetic analogs (sermorelin, tesamorelin, CJC-1295, and CJC-1295 with drug affinity complex) in fortified urine. Nineteen major in vitro metabolites were identified, selected for synthesis, purified, and characterized in house. These were used as reference materials to spike into urine together with commercially available parent peptides and a metabolite of sermorelin (sermorelin(3-29)-NH<sub>2</sub> ) to develop a sensitive liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method for their detection to help prove GHRH administration. Limits of detection of the target peptides were generally 1 ng/ml (WADA required performance limit) or less.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-11-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/dta.3183
10