Background
Hexarelin is a synthetic hexapeptide growth-hormone secretagogue. Chemical name His-D-2-methyl-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH₂ (a methylation modification distinguishes it from GHRP-6's structure). Developed in the 1990s as a more potent analog within the GHRP family. Never FDA-approved. Sold as a research peptide and used in compounded preparations through licensed pharmacies until the September 2023 Category 2 listing restricted that pathway.
Mechanism of action
GHS-R / ghrelin receptor agonism
Like other GHRPs, Hexarelin binds the GHS-R1a receptor on pituitary somatotrophs to trigger GH release. The acute pulse is larger than other GHRPs at comparable doses.
CD36 receptor activity (unique among GHRPs)
Hexarelin uniquely binds the CD36 scavenger receptor in cardiac and adipose tissue. This direct cardiac activity is the basis for the cardioprotective signal in animal heart-injury models, modulating cardiac fatty-acid metabolism, reducing infarct size in ischemia-reperfusion models, preserving cardiac function under stress.
Tachyphylaxis
With chronic dosing, the GH-release response to Hexarelin diminishes as ghrelin-receptor signaling desensitizes. Other GHRPs (especially Ipamorelin) maintain their effect better. The practical implication is that Hexarelin protocols typically use shorter cycles with breaks rather than continuous long-term use.
Prolactin elevation
The most pronounced prolactin elevation of any GHRP at comparable doses. Effect is dose-dependent.
Half-life
Plasma half-life is approximately 30–60 minutes. The GH-pulse window after dosing is roughly 1 to 2 hours.
Commonly studied dosing protocols
These are not recommendations. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before any clinical decision.
Subcutaneous (research-community range): 100 to 300 mcg per dose, typically once nightly before bed on an empty stomach. Some protocols use 2–3x daily dosing.
Stacked with a GHRH analog: commonly paired with Sermorelin or CJC-1295 (No DAC).
Cycle length: typical research-community protocols use 4 to 6 week cycles (shorter than Ipamorelin or other GHRPs) to manage tachyphylaxis, with several weeks off between cycles.
Side effects and safety profile
Reported in clinical trials and research-community use:
- Mild flushing or warmth shortly after injection (common, transient)
- Injection-site redness or tenderness (common, mild)
- Increased appetite (common, less than GHRP-6)
- Brief lightheadedness (uncommon)
- Mild fluid retention (uncommon)
- Notable cortisol elevation (dose-dependent)
- Pronounced prolactin elevation (dose-dependent, the largest of any GHRP)
- Mood, libido, or breast-tissue concerns related to prolactin shifts
- Effect diminution over weeks (tachyphylaxis)
Theoretical concerns: GH/IGF-1 elevation interacts theoretically with cancer biology, avoid in active malignancy. Cautious use in diabetes, sleep apnea, prolactin-sensitive conditions. The CD36-receptor cardiac activity adds theoretical considerations for people with active cardiac disease that haven't been characterized in human chronic-use contexts.
References
- Imbimbo BP, Mant T, Edwards M, et al. (1994). "Growth hormone-releasing activity of hexarelin in humans. A dose-response study." Eur J Clin Pharmacol, 46(5), 421–425. PubMed
- Arvat E, Maccario M, Di Vito L, et al. (2001). "Endocrine activities of ghrelin, a natural growth hormone secretagogue (GHS), in humans: comparison and interactions with hexarelin, a nonnatural peptidyl GHS, and GH-releasing hormone." J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 86(3), 1169–1174. PubMed
- Rahim A, O'Neill PA, Shalet SM. (1998). "Growth hormone status during long-term hexarelin therapy." J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 83(5), 1644–1649. PubMed
- Locatelli V, Rossoni G, Schweiger F, et al. (1999). "Growth hormone-independent cardioprotective effects of hexarelin in the rat." Endocrinology, 140(9), 4024–4031. PubMed
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (2023). "Pharmacy Compounding Guidance. FDA Category 2 List." FDA.gov