Head-to-head

Follistatin vs ACE-031

A neutral, evidence-first comparison of Follistatin and ACE-031 — mechanism, approval status, research, and safety.

Follistatin and ACE-031 both aim to increase muscle by blocking the myostatin pathway, which normally limits muscle growth — but they do it differently. Follistatin binds and neutralizes myostatin (and related factors); ACE-031 (a soluble activin receptor) acts as a "decoy" that soaks up myostatin and activins. Both are unapproved, with notable safety caveats.

Educational only — not medical advice. Comparisons summarize published research and do not recommend any compound. Consult a qualified clinician.

At a glance

FollistatinACE-031
TypeMyostatin/activin-binding proteinSoluble activin receptor (decoy)
MechanismBinds and neutralizes myostatinActs as a receptor decoy for myostatin/activins
GoalIncrease muscle growthIncrease muscle growth
FDA statusNot approved (research chemical)Not approved
Safety noteHuman evidence limitedTrials halted over vascular/bleeding safety signals
Sport statusBanned (WADA)Banned (WADA)

The bottom line

Bottom line: Two approaches to the same target — releasing the "brake" myostatin puts on muscle. Follistatin neutralizes myostatin directly; ACE-031 is a decoy receptor. Critically, ACE-031's development was halted over safety signals (including vascular/bleeding effects), and neither has established human benefit. Both are unapproved and banned in sport.

Read the full guides: Follistatin · ACE-031

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between follistatin and ACE-031?

Both target the myostatin pathway to promote muscle, but follistatin binds and neutralizes myostatin directly, while ACE-031 is a soluble activin receptor that acts as a decoy to soak up myostatin and activins.

Is ACE-031 safe?

ACE-031's clinical development was halted over safety signals, including vascular and bleeding-related effects. Neither it nor follistatin is FDA-approved, and human benefit for physique is not established.

Do myostatin inhibitors build muscle?

They aim to release the natural 'brake' (myostatin) on muscle growth, with striking effects in animals. Robust human benefit is not established, and these compounds are unapproved and banned in sport.

References

Combined peer-reviewed sources from both peptide guides. Inclusion is not endorsement.

  1. Haidet AM, Rizo L, Handy C, et al. Long-term enhancement of skeletal muscle mass and strength by single gene administration of myostatin inhibitors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008. Peer-reviewed study
  2. Barbe C, Bray F, Gueugneau M, et al. Comparative proteomic and transcriptomic analysis of follistatin-induced skeletal muscle hypertrophy. J Proteome Res. 2017. Peer-reviewed study
  3. Bielka W, Przezak A, Pawlik A. Follistatin and follistatin-like 3 in metabolic disorders. Prostaglandins Other Lipid Mediat. 2023. Peer-reviewed study
  4. Kozaki K, Ouchi Y. Activin/follistatin and atherosclerosis--a review. J Atheroscler Thromb. 1998. Peer-reviewed study
  5. Hansen JS, Plomgaard P. Circulating follistatin in relation to energy metabolism. Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2016. Peer-reviewed study
  6. Phillips DJ, de Kretser DM. Follistatin: a multifunctional regulatory protein. Front Neuroendocrinol. 1998. Peer-reviewed study
  7. Campbell C, McMillan HJ, Mah JK, et al. Myostatin inhibitor ACE-031 treatment of ambulatory boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Muscle Nerve. 2017. Peer-reviewed study
  8. Attie KM, Borgstein NG, Yang Y, et al. A single ascending-dose study of muscle regulator ACE-031 in healthy volunteers. Muscle Nerve. 2013. Peer-reviewed study
  9. Reichel C, Filip T, Gmeiner G, et al. Gel Electrophoretic Detection of Black Market ACE-031. Drug Test Anal. 2025. Peer-reviewed study
  10. Cadena SM, Bogdanovich S, Khurana TS, et al. ACE-031, a Soluble Activin Type IIB Receptor, Increases Muscle Mass and Strength in the Common Marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). bioRxiv. 2025. Peer-reviewed study
  11. Cadena SM, Bogdanovich S, Khurana TS, et al. ACE-031, a soluble activin type IIB receptor, increases muscle mass and strength in the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). PLoS One. 2026. Peer-reviewed study

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