PMID-39325560 – Effect of BPC-157 on Symptoms in Patients with Interstitial Cystitis

PMID-39325560 – Effect of BPC-157 on Symptoms in Patients with Interstitial Cystitis

Lee E et al. "Effect of BPC-157 on Symptoms in Patients with Interstitial Cystitis: A Pilot Study," Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 2024.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 39325560
DOI โ€”
Year 2024
Journal Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
Study Type Case Series
Evidence Level IV
Sample n=12 female patients with moderate-to-severe interstitial cystitis
Peptide(s) Studied BPC-157

Key Findings

  • 12 women with moderate-to-severe interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome who had failed pentosan polysulfate therapy
  • Single intravesical injection of BPC-157 (10 mg) administered
  • 10 of 12 patients (83%) reported complete resolution of symptoms after one treatment
  • No adverse events reported in any patient
  • One of the very few human clinical studies of BPC-157 for any indication

Study Design

Open-label pilot study. 12 female patients with refractory interstitial cystitis received a single intravesical (bladder instillation) injection of 10 mg BPC-157. Symptom assessment performed before and after treatment. All patients had previously failed standard pentosan polysulfate therapy.

Limitations

  • Small sample size (n=12) without statistical power for efficacy conclusions
  • No placebo control or blinding โ€” high risk of placebo effect in a subjective symptom condition
  • Single-arm design; no randomization
  • Published in a complementary/alternative medicine journal
  • Follow-up duration and durability of response not clearly reported
  • Interstitial cystitis symptoms are known to have high placebo response rates

Clinical Relevance

This is one of the first published human clinical studies of BPC-157 for a specific therapeutic indication. The 83% complete response rate is striking but must be interpreted cautiously given the open-label design, small sample, and high placebo response rates typical of IC/BPS. Demonstrates feasibility of intravesical BPC-157 administration. Requires confirmation in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial.

Related

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