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Tesamorelin

Egrifta, TH9507

Quick Stats
Studies 64
Trials 24
Score 3
2007 pubmed

TH9507: an experimental treatment for lipodystrophy.

Monroe. Anne A

Key Findings

  • Tesamorelin significantly reduces visceral adipose tissue in HIV‑related lipodystrophy patients
  • The drug shows improvements in metabolic markers like insulin resistance and blood lipids
  • Clinical trials report it is generally well‑tolerated with a manageable safety profile

Practical Outcomes

  • If you have excess visceral fat and can access a doctor willing to prescribe tesamorelin, it may help shrink that deep belly fat and improve metabolic health, but expect daily injections, monitoring, and a high price tag. Use it only under medical supervision and consider it an experimental option rather than a first‑line DIY solution.

Summary

Tesamorelin (TH9507) is a lab‑made hormone that tells your body to release more growth hormone, and early trials show it can shrink the deep belly fat that builds up in some HIV patients with lipodystrophy, also helping some blood‑fat and insulin issues. It’s still experimental for most people, but the data suggest it could become a useful tool for cutting visceral fat if you can get a prescription and manage the cost and side‑effects.

Abstract

As the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) became widespread, HIV positive individuals and their physicians began to notice changes in body fat distribution, with excess fat or fat loss noted in different areas. These body shape changes are sometimes accompanied by metabolic abnormalities, such as insulin resistance and elevated blood fats. Collectively, these changes are known as lipodystrophy syndrome. Treatment options for lipodystrophy are somewhat limited. Growth hormone has been used with success in clinical trials to reduce visceral adipose tissue, fat that collects around the abdominal organs. A new product, TH9507, a synthetic growth hormone releasing hormone analog made by the Canadian pharmaceutical company Theratechnologies, is currently showing promise in clinical trials and may represent a new treatment option for people with some types of lipodystrophy.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007