BPC-157
BPC-157 is a synthetic pentadecapeptide (15 amino acids) derived from a portion of body protection compound found in human gastric juice. It has extensive animal evidence for accelerating healing of tendons, ligaments, muscles, gut mucosa, and neurological tissue. Human clinical data is limited to GI indications. Widely used by athletes off-label for injury recovery and gut healing. Currently research-use only with no approved human indications outside gastric ulcer studies.
Evidence
Moderate evidence
Safety
Unknown safety profile
Clinical Status
No formal phase listed
Research Sync
Feb 19, 2026
Dosing
Pharmacology
Evidence Score
Scores estimated from study counts. Exact breakdown computed after research sync.
Plain-English Snapshot
BPC-157 is currently categorized as a peptide compound.
Evidence is moderate (64/100): promising signal from 216 indexed studies, but context and population still matter.
Safety scoring is incomplete. Start conservatively and monitor carefully.
Core mechanism
Upregulates VEGF and GH receptors; activates FAK-paxillin tendon repair pathway; modulates NO-cGMP system
Practical Context
Strongest current signals
- Level C: While peptide therapy may possess significant therapeutic and regenerative potential, it is critical that orthopaedic and sports medicine providers understand the current lack of evidence to support the clinical use of these peptides.
- Level C: Emerging Use of BPC-157 in Orthopaedic Sports Medicine: A Systematic Review.
- Level C: Regeneration or Risk? A Narrative Review of BPC-157 for Musculoskeletal Healing.