Research peptideNot FDA-approvedPreclinical evidenceBanned in sport (WADA)
BPC-157 is a synthetic peptide studied primarily in animals for its proposed effects on tissue repair. Interest is high, but the evidence base is largely preclinical — meaningful human clinical trial data is limited.
BPC-157 (“Body Protection Compound-157”) is a synthetic chain of 15 amino acids derived from a partial sequence of a protective protein identified in human gastric juice. In animal studies it has been associated with accelerated healing of tendon, ligament, muscle, and gastrointestinal tissue. Popularity has outpaced the evidence, and it is important to separate the two.
BPC-157 is a stable, synthetically produced peptide. It is sold as a “research chemical,” not as an approved medication, and research-supply product is not manufactured to pharmaceutical standards — raising real questions about purity, identity, and sterility.
The mechanism is not fully understood. The most-cited proposed pathways, based on laboratory and animal work, include:
These are mechanistic hypotheses supported mainly by preclinical models — not established mechanisms confirmed in humans.
The honest summary: the evidence is predominantly preclinical.
| Evidence type | Status |
|---|---|
| Animal (rodent) studies | Numerous; suggest accelerated soft-tissue and GI healing. A large share originate from a single research group, which limits independent replication. |
| In-vitro (cell) studies | Support proposed angiogenic and fibroblast effects. |
| Human clinical trials | Very limited. There is not yet robust, large-scale, peer-reviewed human trial evidence establishing efficacy or long-term safety. |
Areas explored in preclinical research — none of which constitute proven human uses — include musculoskeletal injury recovery (tendon/ligament/muscle) and gastrointestinal models. These are research directions, not established treatments.
Anyone considering BPC-157 should do so only in conversation with a qualified, licensed provider who can weigh their individual history, current medications, goals, and the limits of the evidence — and advise on legality and sourcing. This page is not a recommendation to use BPC-157.
No. It is not an approved drug and is sold as a research chemical. Legal status varies by jurisdiction.
The large majority of research is preclinical. Robust human clinical trial data is very limited.
Yes — it is on the WADA Prohibited List, so it is prohibited for athletes subject to anti-doping rules.
If you'd like help applying this information to your own health, schedule a consultation with the Bearing team.
Request a ConsultationReferences are provided for further reading. Bearing summarizes the literature conservatively and updates pages as evidence evolves.
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