PMID-40131143 – Safety of Intravenous Infusion of BPC157 in Humans

PMID-40131143 – Safety of Intravenous Infusion of BPC157 in Humans

Lee E, Burgess K. "Safety of Intravenous Infusion of BPC157 in Humans: A Pilot Study," Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 2025.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 40131143
DOI โ€”
Year 2025
Journal Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
Study Type Case Series
Evidence Level IV
Sample n=2 healthy human adults
Peptide(s) Studied BPC-157

Key Findings

  • First published study evaluating IV administration of BPC-157 in humans
  • IRB-approved pilot study in 2 healthy adults receiving IV BPC-157 at doses up to 20 mg
  • No adverse effects observed on cardiac, hepatic, renal, thyroid, or glucose biomarkers
  • IV BPC-157 was well-tolerated at both 10 mg and 20 mg doses
  • Establishes preliminary human safety data for the IV route of administration

Study Design

Open-label, IRB-approved pilot study in 2 healthy adult volunteers. Subjects received escalating IV doses of BPC-157 (10 mg and 20 mg). Comprehensive metabolic panels, cardiac markers, thyroid function, and glucose monitoring were assessed before and after administration.

Limitations

  • Extremely small sample size (n=2) โ€” no statistical power for safety conclusions
  • No placebo control or blinding
  • Single-dose assessment; no data on repeated dosing safety
  • Published in a complementary/alternative medicine journal, not a mainstream pharmacology journal
  • Short follow-up period; long-term safety unknown

Clinical Relevance

While the sample size is too small for definitive safety conclusions, this is historically significant as the first published human IV safety data for BPC-157. The absence of adverse effects at doses up to 20 mg IV provides preliminary reassurance but requires validation in larger Phase 1 trials. Note: NCT02637284 (Phase 1 PK/safety trial, Croatia) remains status unknown since 2015.

Related

#research #case-series #evidence-level-IV