Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of BPC-157 and MK-677 — mechanism, dosing, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
BPC-157 is a synthetic pentadecapeptide (sequence GEPPPGKPADDAGLV) derived from a 15-amino-acid fragment of body protection compound (BPC), a protein isolated from human gastric juice. It is research-only, not approved by the FDA or any major regulator for human use, and almost all published evidence comes from rodent models.
MK-677 (ibutamoren, MK-0677, L-163,191) is an orally active, non-peptide small-molecule growth hormone secretagogue developed by Merck in the 1990s. It is a spiropiperidine ghrelin-receptor (GHSR-1a) agonist — not a peptide and not a SARM, though it is commonly misclassified as both in grey-market retail. Merck discontinued development after mixed efficacy and adverse metabolic / cardiovascular findings; it is not FDA-approved.
BPC-157
MK-677
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
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BPC-157
MK-677
No pricing data yet.
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BPC-157
334
COAs
99.3%
Avg purity
16
Labs
MK-677
5
COAs
98.3%
Avg purity
3
Labs
BPC-157 is among peptides under FDA review for the Category 1 (503A) list; if added, it would require a prescription to be compounded by registered 503A/503B pharmacies — not yet authorized. MK-677 remains research-only. In April 2026 the FDA removed 12 peptides from Category 2, which does not place them on the Category 1 list or authorize compounding. The FDA's Pharmacy Compounding Advisory Committee is advisory and meets July 23–24, 2026 to review nominations and make recommendations to the FDA.
Extensive rodent data from the Sikiric group and others report accelerated healing of tendon, ligament, muscle, and gastrointestinal injury, plus cytoprotective effects in models of NSAID and alcohol damage (PMID 21548867, 30915550). Preclinical tendon studies demonstrate enhanced growth hormone receptor expression in fibroblasts (PMID 25415472) and promote tendon outgrowth, cell survival, and cell migration (PMID 21030672). Published human clinical evidence is limited; an early oral formulation (PL 14736) was explored for inflammatory bowel disease but has not progressed to approval. No peer-reviewed trial validates the injectable doses (200–500 mcg) commonly used on the grey market, and pharmacokinetics and long-term safety in humans are not well characterized.
Key references
MK-677 has meaningful human data from Merck-sponsored Phase I/II trials. Murphy et al. (JCEM 1998, PMID 9467534) showed 25 mg MK-677 reversed nitrogen wasting during caloric restriction in healthy adults. Svensson et al. (JCEM 1998, PMID 9467542) reported ~40% IGF-1 elevation, increased fat-free mass, and higher energy expenditure over 8 weeks in obese men. Copinschi et al. (Neuroendocrinology 1997, PMID 9349662) documented improved slow-wave and REM sleep in young and older adults. Nass et al. (Ann Intern Med 2008, PMID 18981485) — the pivotal 2-year randomized trial in 65 healthy older adults — restored GH and IGF-1 to young-adult levels and increased fat-free mass, but produced modest fasting glucose elevation and insulin resistance. The Adunsky et al. Phase IIb hip-fracture trial (Arch Gerontol Geriatr 2011, PMID 21067829) was stopped early after a congestive-heart-failure safety signal (4/62 ibutamoren vs 1/60 placebo). Merck discontinued development. MK-677 is commonly mislabeled as a 'SARM' in grey-market retail — it is not; it is a ghrelin-receptor agonist and oral GH secretagogue. It has never been FDA-approved.
BPC-157 (Recovery) and MK-677 (Performance) are in different categories and target different biological pathways. This is a common pattern in multi-compound research protocols. Researchers should monitor the biomarkers from both profiles and watch for interactions listed in each compound’s contraindications. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before combining any research compounds.
This platform provides informational tools only, not medical advice. This comparison is for educational purposes only. Consult a licensed provider.
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Key references