Updated
Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 16
100-Plus FDA-Approved Peptide Drugs Contrast With Viral Social Media Claims
Updated
Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 16

100-Plus FDA-Approved Peptide Drugs Contrast With Viral Social Media Claims

3 articles · Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 16

Summary

  • Peptides are surging as a social media wellness trend, with sellers claiming benefits for muscle growth, sleep, healing and sexual performance despite limited proof for many popular products.
  • More than 100 peptide drugs do have FDA approval—including insulin and GLP-1 medicines such as Ozempic and Wegovy—but many trendy peptide injections, powders and oral supplements are unapproved.
  • Preliminary studies suggest some peptides may aid tissue repair, skin health or bone density, yet reported side effects include headaches and nausea, and unregulated products may be impure or contaminated.
  • Athletes have used some peptides for decades because they may spur tissue repair or growth hormone release, but major sports leagues and international governing bodies treat them as performance-enhancing substances.
  • Doctors quoted in the report said people considering peptides should first ask what goal they are pursuing and whether safer, proven FDA-approved options already exist.

Insights

With an FDA decision imminent, will risky ‘biohacking’ peptides soon be legally prescribed?
Beyond Ozempic, is the social media peptide craze creating a public health crisis?