Head-to-head

Tesamorelin vs Sermorelin

A neutral, evidence-first comparison of Tesamorelin and Sermorelin — mechanism, approval status, research, and safety.

Tesamorelin and sermorelin are both GHRH analogs that stimulate the body's own growth hormone, and both have regulatory histories — but different current standing. Tesamorelin is an actively FDA-approved drug (Egrifta) for HIV-related visceral fat; sermorelin was previously approved (Geref) and is now typically supplied through compounding.

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

At a glance

TesamorelinSermorelin
ClassGHRH analogGHRH analog (GHRH 1–29)
Brand nameEgriftaGeref (discontinued)
FDA statusApprovedFormerly approved; now compounded
Approved useVisceral fat in HIV lipodystrophyHistoric diagnostic/pediatric GH uses
MechanismStimulates pituitary GH releaseStimulates pituitary GH release
Sport statusBanned (WADA)Banned (WADA)

The bottom line

Bottom line: Both are GHRH analogs, but tesamorelin is a currently-approved drug with a specific indication and trial evidence, whereas sermorelin's approval lapsed and it now reaches patients mainly via compounding pharmacies. Neither is an approved general anti-aging or physique therapy, and both are banned in sport.

Read the full guides: Tesamorelin · Sermorelin

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between tesamorelin and sermorelin?

Both are GHRH analogs that boost growth hormone. Tesamorelin is currently FDA-approved (Egrifta) for HIV-related visceral fat; sermorelin was previously approved and is now usually compounded.

Is sermorelin still FDA-approved?

Sermorelin's branded product (Geref) was discontinued; it is now typically supplied through compounding pharmacies rather than as an approved branded drug. Tesamorelin remains approved.

Are they used for anti-aging?

Neither is an approved anti-aging therapy. Tesamorelin's approval is specific to HIV lipodystrophy. Both are prohibited in sport.

References

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

  1. Falutz J, Allas S, Blot K, et al. Metabolic effects of a growth hormone-releasing factor in patients with HIV. N Engl J Med. 2007. Peer-reviewed study
  2. Stanley TL, Falutz J, Mamputu JC, et al. Effects of tesamorelin on visceral fat and liver fat in HIV-infected patients with abdominal fat accumulation: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2014. Peer-reviewed study
  3. Russo SC, Ockene MW, Arpante AK, et al. Efficacy and safety of tesamorelin in people with HIV on integrase inhibitors. AIDS. 2024. Peer-reviewed study
  4. Grunfeld C, Dritselis A, Kirkpatrick P. Tesamorelin. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2011. Peer-reviewed study
  5. Dhillon S. Tesamorelin: a review of its use in the management of HIV-associated lipodystrophy. Drugs. 2011. Peer-reviewed study
  6. Spooner LM, Olin JL. Tesamorelin: a growth hormone-releasing factor analogue for HIV-associated lipodystrophy. Ann Pharmacother. 2012. Peer-reviewed study
  7. Walker RF. Sermorelin: a better approach to management of adult-onset growth hormone insufficiency? Clin Interv Aging. 2006. Peer-reviewed study
  8. Kerrigan JR, Martha PM Jr, Blizzard RM, et al. Treatment with GHRH(1-29)NH2 in children with idiopathic short stature induces a sustained increase in growth velocity. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1994. Peer-reviewed study
  9. Prakash A, Goa KL. Sermorelin: a review of its use in the diagnosis and treatment of children with idiopathic growth hormone deficiency. BioDrugs. 1999. Peer-reviewed study
  10. Chang Y, Huang R, Zhai Y, et al. A potentially effective drug for patients with recurrent glioma: sermorelin. Ann Transl Med. 2021. Peer-reviewed study

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