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Specimen Atlas of Research Peptides81 plates · MIT
Side-by-side · Research reference

GHRP-6vsTriptorelin

Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.

APhase 1HUMAN-REVIEWED10/36 cited
BFDA-ApprovedHUMAN-REVIEWED16/64 cited
GHRP-6
Hexapeptide GHRP · Strong appetite stimulant
100–200 mcgPer doseBowers 1990
Phase 1Evidence levelBowers 1990
~15 minHalf-lifeMalagón 1999
SQ · Multiple sites · 1–3×/day
Triptorelin
GnRH Agonist · FDA-Approved
3.75–22.5 mgDepot dose rangeYee 2025Chen 2024
<50 ng/dLTestosterone target
1–6 monthsDepot durationYee 2025Chen 2024
IM · Depot Injection · Monthly to 6-MonthlyYee 2025

01Mechanism of Action

Parameter
GHRP-6
Triptorelin
Primary target
Ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1a)Bowers 1990
Pituitary GnRH receptorsUnknown 2012
Pathway
GHS-R1a → Gαq → Ca²⁺ → GH release; central appetite driveBowers 2002
GnRH receptor agonism → initial flare (LH/FSH spike) → receptor desensitization → sustained LH/FSH suppression
Downstream effect
GH pulse + strong appetite stimulation; modest IGF-1 elevationBowers 2002
Castration-level suppression of testosterone (men) and estrogen (women) within 2–4 weeks post-flare
Feedback intact?
No — bypasses physiological pulsatility; continuous agonism produces paradoxical suppression
Origin
Synthetic hexapeptide; first-generation GHRP from Bowers groupBowers 1990
Synthetic decapeptide analogue of native GnRH with amino acid substitutions for enhanced receptor affinity and stability
Antibody development

02Dosage Protocols

Parameter
GHRP-6
Triptorelin
Standard dose
100–200 mcg per injectionBowers 1990
Frequency
1–3× per day
Every 1, 3, or 6 months per formulation
Lower / starter dose
50 mcg per dose
Evidence basis
Phase 1 + clinical practiceBowers 1990
Multiple Phase 3 RCTs · FDA-approved 1999
Duration
8–12 weeks on / 4 off
Reconstitution
Bacteriostatic water
Timing
Pre-meal preferred for appetite support
Half-life
1-month depot
3.75 mg IM
Most common formulation for prostate cancer.
3-month depot
11.25 mg IMYee 2025
Reduced injection frequency.
6-month depot
22.5 mg IMYee 2025Chen 2024
Long-acting formulation; improved adherence in real-world use.Yee 2025
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
GHRP-6
Triptorelin
Hunger
Pronounced — defining feature vs ipamorelin
Cortisol elevation
Mild
Prolactin elevation
Mild
Injection site reaction
Mild
Cancer risk
Contraindicated in active malignancy
Pregnancy / OB
Avoid
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
Sexual dysfunction
Erectile dysfunction, loss of libido (expected pharmacological effect)Jia 2025
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
GHRP-6
  • ·Active malignancy
  • ·Pregnancy / breastfeeding
Triptorelin
  • ·Hypersensitivity to triptorelin, GnRH, or GnRH agonist analogues
  • ·Pregnancy (Category X)
Relative Contraindications
GHRP-6
  • ·Severe insulin resistance (appetite-driven caloric load)
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
GHRP-6
Triptorelin
1. Reconstitution
Add 2 mL bacteriostatic water to 5 mg vial → 2.5 mg/mL.
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. Injection site
SQ — abdomen. Rotate sites.
Intramuscular — gluteal or deltoid muscle. Use 21–23G needle. Aspirate to confirm non-vascular placement. Rotate sites with repeat injections.
3. Timing
Pre-meal for appetite support; pre-sleep for GH alignment.
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
Lyophilised: room temp. Reconstituted: refrigerate ≤30 days.
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. Needle
29–31G, 4–8 mm insulin syringe.
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.