Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of Alagebrium (ALT-711) and Mirabegron (YM-178) — mechanism, dosing, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
Alagebrium (ALT-711) is a thiazolium-derived non-peptide small molecule investigated as an advanced glycation end-product (AGE) crosslink breaker. It reached Phase I–III human trials (2001–2010) for diastolic heart failure and hypertension but was never approved; clinical development was discontinued around 2009 due to financial constraints. No validated human dose exists. Currently sold by research-chemical vendors for research use only.
Mirabegron is a non-peptide, small-molecule selective β3-adrenergic receptor agonist FDA-approved in 2012 for overactive bladder at 25–50 mg/day oral dosing. It is also sold as unregulated 'research use only' powder by fine-chemical vendors, despite being a prescription pharmaceutical. Investigational metabolic research has used a supratherapeutic 100 mg/day dose to study brown adipose tissue activation—an off-label, non-approved use. Mirabegron is pharmacologically distinct from WADA-prohibited β2-agonists, though its it is not on the WADA Prohibited List (only beta-2 agonists are prohibited, Category S3).
Alagebrium (ALT-711)
Mirabegron (YM-178)
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Dose Range
Route
COA-verified vendors · trust score ≥70 required · single-vial price — bulk/bundle deals may be lower
Alagebrium (ALT-711)
Mirabegron (YM-178)
No pricing data yet.
Check Mirabegron (YM-178) prices →COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
Alagebrium (ALT-711)
2
COAs
99.6%
Avg purity
2
Labs
Mirabegron (YM-178)
1
COAs
99.8%
Avg purity
1
Labs
Alagebrium reached Phase I–III human trials (2001–2010) under sponsor Alteon Inc./Synvista Therapeutics but was never approved. A 16-week open-label pilot in 23 elderly patients (21 completers) with diastolic heart failure showed reduced left ventricular mass and improved Doppler diastolic index (E') without change in blood pressure, ejection fraction, or exercise capacity. The SPECTRA trial (ALT-711 + hydrochlorothiazide in hypertension) was terminated; the BENEFICIAL trial (chronic heart failure) was completed but did not meet efficacy endpoints. Preclinical studies in non-diabetic hypertensive rats, aged dogs, aged monkeys, streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats, and diabetic mouse models demonstrated improved vascular/cardiac function, reduced aortic stiffness, decreased collagen crosslinking, and improved renal pathology. A 2-year rat toxicology study found liver alterations that prompted a temporary enrollment suspension pending review.
Mirabegron is an FDA-approved drug with extensive human data, not a novel research chemical. Approved adult dosing is 25 mg once daily, increased to 50 mg after 4–8 weeks for overactive bladder. A registered clinical trial (NCT04823442) used 100 mg/day for 4 weeks in 14 healthy women, reporting increased brown adipose tissue activity/volume, HDL cholesterol, insulin sensitivity, and resting energy expenditure with no change in body weight or fat mass (O'Mara et al., J Clin Invest 2020, PMID 31961826)—an open-label study without placebo control. Rat studies confirmed selective β3-adrenoceptor agonist activity with bladder-relaxant effects (Hatanaka et al., 2013, PMID 23239087). Ex vivo porcine ureter studies found mirabegron reduced contractility partly via α1-adrenoceptor antagonism, complicating a pure β3-selectivity profile at the ureter (PMC9192402).
Key references
Alagebrium (ALT-711) and Mirabegron (YM-178) are both in the Metabolic category and may have overlapping mechanisms. Researchers should review both profiles carefully, understand the mechanisms of action, and monitor the relevant biomarkers when combining compounds in the same class. As always, consult a licensed healthcare provider before making any decisions about combining research compounds.
This platform provides informational tools only, not medical advice. This comparison is for educational purposes only. Consult a licensed provider.
Frequency
Dosing Notes
Side Effects
Contraindications
Lab Testing