Quick Comparison
| Adipotide | Tesamorelin + Ipamorelin | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Estimated 2-4 hours (limited pharmacokinetic data) | Tesamorelin: 26 minutes | Ipamorelin: 2 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Experimental only: primate studies used 0.43 mg/kg subcutaneous. No established human dosing protocol. Not available for clinical use. | Standard: Tesamorelin 1-2 mg + Ipamorelin 100-300 mcg subcutaneous once daily, typically before bed. Often cycled 12 weeks on, 4 weeks off. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (experimental) | Subcutaneous injection (daily) |
| Research Papers | 0 papers | 2 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Adipotide
Adipotide uses a fundamentally different approach to fat reduction compared to appetite suppressants or metabolic modulators — it physically destroys the blood supply feeding white adipose tissue. The molecule is a chimeric peptidomimetic with two functional domains: a targeting peptide (sequence CKGGRAKDC) that homes to blood vessels in white fat, and a pro-apoptotic peptide (D(KLAKLAK)2) that kills the cells it enters.
The targeting sequence binds specifically to prohibitin, a protein expressed on the luminal surface of endothelial cells in the vasculature supplying white adipose tissue but not other organ systems. This vascular address system means adipotide accumulates selectively in fat tissue blood vessels. Once bound, the molecule is internalized into the endothelial cells, where the pro-apoptotic D(KLAKLAK)2 domain disrupts mitochondrial membrane integrity, triggering programmed cell death.
As the blood vessels supplying fat deposits are destroyed, the adipose tissue they serve undergoes ischemic cell death and is gradually reabsorbed by the body. In rhesus monkey studies, adipotide treatment produced significant reductions in body weight and waist circumference, with measurable decreases in white fat mass on imaging. However, the approach carries inherent risks — the targeting is not perfectly specific, and prohibitin expression in renal vasculature led to significant kidney toxicity in primate studies, which has severely limited clinical development.
Tesamorelin + Ipamorelin
The Tesamorelin + Ipamorelin combination pairs the only FDA-approved GHRH analogue with the most selective growth hormone secretagogue, creating a dual-pathway approach similar in principle to CJC-1295/Ipamorelin but with tesamorelin's unique advantages for body composition.
Tesamorelin activates the GHRH receptor on pituitary somatotrophs through the Gs/cAMP/PKA pathway, stimulating GH gene transcription and secretion. Its trans-3-hexenoic acid modification at position 1 provides enhanced receptor affinity and modest DPP-IV resistance compared to native GHRH. Ipamorelin simultaneously activates the GHS-R1a receptor via the Gq/11/PLC/calcium pathway, providing the same synergistic amplification of GH pulses described for the CJC/Ipa combination.
The distinguishing advantage of tesamorelin in this stack is its clinically demonstrated effect on visceral adipose tissue (VAT). In multiple randomized controlled trials for HIV-associated lipodystrophy, tesamorelin reduced trunk fat by 15-18% over 6 months, with visceral fat reduction being proportionally greater than subcutaneous fat reduction. This preferential visceral fat mobilization occurs because visceral adipocytes express the highest density of GH receptors and are most responsive to GH-mediated hormone-sensitive lipase activation. The GH elevations produced by tesamorelin/ipamorelin combination may be greater than tesamorelin alone (due to the synergistic dual-pathway effect), potentially enhancing this visceral fat-targeting effect. The combination also benefits from tesamorelin's full-length GHRH sequence (44 amino acids vs 29 for CJC-1295), which may provide more complete receptor activation, and from the preserved pulsatility that both agents maintain through intact somatostatin feedback regulation.
Risks & Safety
Adipotide
Common
dehydration, loss of appetite, lethargy (seen in primate studies).
Serious
significant kidney damage (development was halted for this reason), potential damage to blood vessels in non-fat tissues.
Tesamorelin + Ipamorelin
Common
injection site reactions (redness, pain), joint pain, swelling in arms and legs, tingling sensations, headache.
Serious
may worsen blood sugar control from sustained GH elevation, may promote existing tumors.
Rare
carpal tunnel syndrome, severe allergic reaction. Not safe during pregnancy or active cancer.
Full Profiles
Adipotide →
An extreme experimental approach to fat loss — it physically destroys the blood vessels that feed fat tissue, starving fat cells until they die. Originally developed using anti-cancer technology at MD Anderson Cancer Center. While it did reduce fat in monkey studies, it also caused serious kidney damage, which has effectively stopped its development. Not available for human use.
Tesamorelin + Ipamorelin →
A popular combination pairing Tesamorelin (FDA-approved for certain conditions) with Ipamorelin to boost growth hormone. Favored for improving body composition, reducing belly fat, and anti-aging. Tesamorelin has proven effectiveness for visceral fat reduction, and Ipamorelin has a clean side-effect profile, making this a premium GH peptide protocol.