Tesofensine

Tesofensine

โš ๏ธ Structural Separation Notice

The Ageless Pep Academy is a clinical education property independent from any commerce operation. Any references in this profile to Ageless Peps product SKUs, pricing, or the agelesspeps.com domain are for completeness and transparency; they are not endorsements and do not form part of the clinical education content. Clinicians are responsible for independent verification of any product sourcing decision. The Academy's Medical Director provides editorial oversight only and does not endorse commercial products.

Triple monoamine reuptake inhibitor (SNDRI) that suppresses appetite by blocking serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine reuptake, producing significant weight loss in clinical trials.

Quick Facts

Property Value
Also Known As NS-2330, TE (development code)
Category Metabolic / Weight Loss
Sequence N/A (small molecule, not a peptide)
Molecular Weight ~383.5 Da
Molecular Formula C17H23Cl2NO2
PubChem CID 11370876
Administration Oral
Typical Dose Range 0.25-0.5 mg daily
Half-Life ~200 hours (8-9 days)
Storage Room temperature; protect from moisture and light
FDA Status Research only (Phase 2 completed; Phase 3 never initiated in US)
WADA Status Prohibited S6 (Stimulant)

Mechanism of Action

Tesofensine is a potent triple monoamine reuptake inhibitor (SNDRI) that blocks the presynaptic reuptake of serotonin (5-HT), norepinephrine (NE), and dopamine (DA) in the central nervous system. Originally developed as NS-2330 for Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease by NeuroSearch A/S (Denmark), unexpected weight loss in CNS trial participants led to its repositioning as an anti-obesity agent (PMID: 18356831).

The mechanism of appetite suppression involves enhancement of satiety signaling through all three monoamine pathways simultaneously. PET imaging has confirmed that at the therapeutic dose of 0.5 mg, tesofensine occupies approximately 30-40% of dopamine transporters (DAT) in the human brain โ€” below the ~50-60% threshold associated with abuse potential (PMID: 24239329). The appetite-suppressive effect is primarily mediated through alpha-1 adrenoceptor and dopamine D1 receptor stimulation in hypothalamic appetite-regulating circuits (PMID: 20200509).

The extremely long half-life (~200 hours) allows for once-daily dosing with steady-state concentrations achieved over several weeks. Unlike classical stimulants, tesofensine does not produce significant thermogenic effects โ€” weight loss is predominantly driven by reduced energy intake through appetite suppression rather than increased energy expenditure (PMID: 20479765).

Key Research Areas

  1. Obesity treatment โ€” Phase 2 RCT showed 9-11% weight loss at 0.5-1.0 mg doses over 24 weeks, potentially double the efficacy of then-approved anti-obesity drugs (PMID: 18950853)
  2. Appetite regulation โ€” Reverses low forebrain dopamine levels in diet-induced obesity models, restoring normal satiety signaling (PMID: 23932919)
  3. CNS disease-associated weight loss โ€” Originally discovered via weight loss in Parkinson's/Alzheimer's trials (PMID: 18356831)
  4. Metabolic parameter improvement โ€” Improvements in body composition with preferential fat mass loss
  5. Dopamine transporter pharmacology โ€” PET imaging characterization of DAT occupancy at clinical doses (PMID: 24239329)

Evidence Level Summary

Evidence Type Count Notes
Human RCTs 2 Phase 2 obesity trial (Lancet); energy metabolism study
Human observational 2 PET imaging; PD/AD weight loss observation
Animal in vivo 5+ DIO rat models (appetite, DA levels, D2/D3 receptors)
In vitro 1+ Transporter binding studies
Systematic reviews 0 None published

Clinical Applications

  • Weight Management โ€” Primary application; appetite suppression and fat loss
  • Fat Loss โ€” Preferential reduction in fat mass with body composition improvement
  • Metabolic Syndrome โ€” Potential metabolic parameter improvements secondary to weight loss

Protocols Using This Peptide

Ageless Peps Products

  • AP-Tesofensine-Capsules โ€” Tesofensine 500mcg x 60 capsules

Dosing Reference

Research Dosing Ranges (from literature)

Route Dose Range Frequency Duration Source
Oral 0.25 mg Once daily 24 weeks PMID 18950853
Oral 0.5 mg Once daily 24 weeks PMID 18950853 (optimal risk-benefit)
Oral 1.0 mg Once daily 24 weeks PMID 18950853 (max studied; more CV effects)

Cycling

The extremely long half-life (~200 hours) means the drug takes weeks to reach steady state and weeks to wash out. No formal cycling protocols have been established. In clinical trials, 24-week continuous treatment was used. Some practitioners recommend periodic breaks (e.g., 12 weeks on / 4 weeks off) to assess response and minimize cardiovascular effects.

Contraindications & Safety

  • Contraindications: Uncontrolled hypertension, tachyarrhythmias, coronary artery disease, history of stroke, concurrent MAOI use, concurrent SSRI/SNRI use (serotonin syndrome risk), narrow-angle glaucoma
  • Common side effects: Dry mouth, nausea, constipation, hard stools, diarrhea, insomnia, headache
  • Cardiovascular effects: Heart rate increase ~7 bpm at 0.5 mg dose (the primary safety concern that prevented Phase 3 progression); blood pressure may increase at higher doses
  • Drug interactions: Strong interactions with MAOIs, SSRIs, SNRIs, other monoamine-active drugs; potential for serotonin syndrome. Caution with CYP3A4 inhibitors.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: Contraindicated
  • Special populations: No data in renal/hepatic impairment; not studied in pediatric populations; caution in elderly (original CNS trials included elderly patients)
  • Abuse potential: DAT occupancy at therapeutic doses (~30-40%) is below stimulant abuse threshold, but classified as a stimulant by WADA

Synergistic Combinations

  • AOD-9604 + Tesofensine โ€” Complementary mechanisms: appetite suppression (tesofensine) + direct lipolysis (AOD-9604)
  • 5-Amino-1MQ + Tesofensine โ€” NNMT inhibition + monoamine reuptake inhibition for metabolic syndrome
  • MOTS-C + Tesofensine โ€” Mitochondrial metabolic support + central appetite control

Related Research

PMID Title Year Study Type
PMID-18950853 – Tesofensine Phase 2 Obesity Trial Effect of tesofensine on bodyweight loss in obese patients 2008 RCT
PMID-20479765 – Tesofensine Energy Metabolism and Appetite Effect on energy metabolism and appetite in overweight men 2010 RCT
PMID-19777399 – Tesofensine Monoamine Reuptake Inhibitor Review Tesofensine for the treatment of obesity 2009 Narrative Review
PMID-24239329 – Tesofensine Dopamine Transporter Occupancy PET Dopamine transporter occupancy as measured by PET 2014 Observational
PMID-18356831 – Tesofensine Weight Loss in Parkinsons and Alzheimers Weight loss in Parkinson's or Alzheimer's patients 2008 Observational

References

  • PMID 18950853 โ€” Astrup et al., Lancet 2008 (Phase 2 obesity RCT)
  • PMID 20479765 โ€” Sjodin et al., Int J Obes 2010 (energy metabolism)
  • PMID 19777399 โ€” Hansen & Astrup, Curr Opin Investig Drugs 2009 (review)
  • PMID 24239329 โ€” Appel et al., Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 2014 (PET imaging)
  • PMID 18356831 โ€” Bhatti et al., Obesity 2008 (CNS disease weight loss)

Related

FDA Disclaimer: The products and claims made about specific products have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration and are not approved to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease.

#peptide #metabolic #weight-loss #oral #small-molecule