Side-by-side · Research reference
CrystagenvsTriptorelin
Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.
AAnimal-MechanisticHUMAN-REVIEWED12/40 cited
BFDA-ApprovedHUMAN-REVIEWED16/64 cited
Crystagen
Khavinson Bioregulator · Immune-Thymic
SQ · Protocol variable
01Mechanism of Action
Parameter
Crystagen
Triptorelin
Pathway
B-cell activation → Immune modulation during agingСhervyakova 2014
GnRH receptor agonism → initial flare (LH/FSH spike) → receptor desensitization → sustained LH/FSH suppression
Downstream effect
B-cell activation via apoptosis reduction; no observed increase in splenic cell renewalСhervyakova 2014
Castration-level suppression of testosterone (men) and estrogen (women) within 2–4 weeks post-flare
Feedback intact?
Unknown — bioregulator mechanism not fully characterized
No — bypasses physiological pulsatility; continuous agonism produces paradoxical suppression
Origin
Synthetic Lys-Glu-Asp-Gly tetrapeptide — Khavinson bioregulator series
Synthetic decapeptide analogue of native GnRH with amino acid substitutions for enhanced receptor affinity and stability
Antibody development
—
—
02Dosage Protocols
Parameter
Crystagen
Triptorelin
Standard dose
Not standardized — variable protocols
Russian bioregulator literature does not specify unified human dosing.
—
Evidence basis
Animal / mechanistic
Multiple Phase 3 RCTs · FDA-approved 1999
Route
Subcutaneous (presumed from bioregulator class)
—
Frequency
Unknown — bioregulator protocols variable
Every 1, 3, or 6 months per formulation
Duration
Unknown — chronic administration presumed in animal models
—
Half-life
Not reported
—
1-month depot
—
3.75 mg IM
Most common formulation for prostate cancer.
6-month depot
—
Administration route
—
Intramuscular (IM) — gluteal or deltoid
Indication: Prostate cancer
—
Advanced (metastatic or locally advanced)
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) backbone.
Indication: Endometriosis
—
3.75 mg monthly
FDA-approved; typically 6-month course.
Indication: Central precocious puberty
—
Pediatric use (≥2 years)Jia 2025
Weight-based dosing per FDA label.
Duration (prostate cancer)
—
Continuous or intermittent ADT protocolsPreston 2024
Intermittent ADT may reduce side effects; cardiovascular risk similar to continuous.
Monitoring
—
Serum testosterone, PSA (prostate cancer), bone density, lipids, glucose
04Side Effects & Safety
Parameter
Crystagen
Triptorelin
Published adverse events
None reported in available animal literature
—
Human safety data
Absent — no controlled human trials identified
—
Autoimmune considerations
Theoretical concern with B-cell modulators in predisposed individuals
—
Initial flare symptoms
—
Bone pain, urinary obstruction, spinal cord compression (first 2 weeks)
Antiandrogen co-treatment (bicalutamide) mitigates flare in metastatic disease.
Cardiovascular events
—
MI, stroke, arrhythmia — GnRH agonists show higher CV risk vs antagonists in meta-analysesPatel 2025Preston 2024
Hot flashes
—
Very common (>60%); vasomotor instability
Bone loss / Osteoporosis
—
Accelerated bone mineral density decline; fracture risk ↑Friedrich 2025
Baseline DEXA scan recommended; bisphosphonates or denosumab may be indicated.
Metabolic syndrome
—
Weight gain, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, diabetes risk
Injection site reactions
—
Pain, erythema, sterile abscess (rare with depot formulations)
Gynecomastia / Breast tenderness
—
Common (10–20%); peripheral aromatization of residual androgens
Fatigue / Mood changes
—
Anemia, depression, cognitive changes reported in long-term ADT
Hepatotoxicity
—
Transient transaminase elevations; clinically apparent liver injury rare
Racial differences (ADT)
—
Black veterans show higher CV event rates vs White veterans on GnRH agonists
Absolute Contraindications
Crystagen
- ·Active autoimmune disease (theoretical)
Triptorelin
- ·Hypersensitivity to triptorelin, GnRH, or GnRH agonist analogues
- ·Pregnancy (Category X)
Relative Contraindications
Crystagen
- ·Pregnancy / lactation (no data)
- ·Active B-cell malignancies
Triptorelin
- ·Active cardiovascular disease — consider GnRH antagonist alternative
- ·Metastatic vertebral disease with spinal cord compression risk (flare hazard)
- ·Severe urinary obstruction — may worsen during flare
- ·Osteoporosis or high fracture risk (requires bone-protective therapy)
05Administration Protocol
Parameter
Crystagen
Triptorelin
1. Route
Subcutaneous injection — presumed from bioregulator class convention. Specific anatomical sites not standardized.
Choose 1-month (3.75 mg), 3-month (11.25 mg), or 6-month (22.5 mg) depot based on adherence needs and clinical context. 6-month formulation shows improved real-world adherence in Asia-Pacific cohorts.
2. Reconstitution
Protocol not standardized. If lyophilized, sterile water or bacteriostatic saline typical for peptide bioregulators.
Intramuscular — gluteal or deltoid muscle. Use 21–23G needle. Aspirate to confirm non-vascular placement. Rotate sites with repeat injections.
3. Timing
Not specified. Bioregulator protocols vary — some practitioners advocate evening dosing, others morning.
For metastatic prostate cancer: co-administer antiandrogen (e.g., bicalutamide 50 mg daily) starting 1 week before first injection and continuing 2–4 weeks to prevent tumor flare.
4. Storage
Lyophilized: room temperature, light-protected. Reconstituted: refrigerate, use within days to weeks depending on preservative.
Baseline: testosterone, PSA, bone density (DEXA), lipids, glucose. Follow-up: testosterone at 4 weeks (confirm <50 ng/dL castration), PSA monthly × 3, then quarterly. Annual DEXA for bone loss.
5. Storage
—
Store vials at room temperature (20–25 °C), protect from light. Do not freeze. Reconstituted suspension should be used immediately.
6. Intermittent ADT protocol (optional)
—
Some protocols use on-treatment periods (9–12 months) alternating with off-treatment intervals until PSA rises. Cardiovascular risk appears similar to continuous ADT.
06Stack Synergy
Crystagen
+ Vilon
Multi-pathwayVilon (Lys-Glu) activates T-helper cells via apoptosis reduction, while Crystagen activates B-cells. Dual T/B immune modulation in aging models may provide complementary thymic-immune support within the Khavinson bioregulator framework. Both target splenic immune aging through distinct lymphocyte subsets.
- Crystagen
- Dose unknown · SQ
- Vilon
- Dose unknown · SQ
- Frequency
- Protocol variable
- Primary benefit
- Broader thymic-immune coverage (T-cell + B-cell)
Triptorelin
— no documented stacks