GHRH analogNot FDA-approvedBanned in sport (WADA)
CJC-1295 is a synthetic growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analog studied for its ability to raise growth hormone and IGF-1. Human data is limited; it is not FDA-approved.
CJC-1295 is a synthetic analog of GHRH designed to stimulate the body's own growth-hormone release. A version (“with DAC”) extends its half-life. It is frequently paired with a ghrelin-receptor agonist such as Ipamorelin in research and optimization settings.
A synthetic research peptide, not an approved medication, sold through research-supply channels.
Mechanism:
Effects on GH/IGF-1 are biologically plausible and seen in early studies; long-term human outcome data is limited.
Some early human pharmacology exists for GH/IGF-1 elevation; outcome and long-term safety data are limited.
| Evidence type | Status |
|---|---|
| Human pharmacology | Early studies show GH/IGF-1 increases. |
| Long-term outcomes/safety | Limited human data. |
Studied around growth-hormone axis modulation. Not an approved treatment.
Growth-hormone-axis manipulation should only be considered with a licensed provider who can monitor labs and risks. This page is not a recommendation.
The DAC (Drug Affinity Complex) version binds albumin to extend its half-life and duration of action.
No.
Yes — GHRH analogs are prohibited under WADA.
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Peptides: Ipamorelin · Sermorelin · Tools: Peptide Reconstitution Calculator