Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of DSIP and Vilon — mechanism, dosing, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) is a nonapeptide (Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu) isolated in 1977 by Schoenenberger and Monnier from cerebral venous blood of rabbits during electrically induced sleep. It has been studied as a putative sleep and stress modulator, but the evidence base is weak, largely pre-2000, and DSIP is not FDA-approved.
Vilon is a synthetic dipeptide (Lys-Glu / KE) from the Khavinson bioregulator series, originally derived from thymus extracts and studied in Russian preclinical models as an immunomodulator and geroprotector. Not FDA-approved; all published evidence originates from a single research group.
DSIP
Vilon
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Dose Range
Route
Frequency
COA-verified vendors · trust score ≥70 required · single-vial price — bulk/bundle deals may be lower
DSIP
Vilon
COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
DSIP
69
COAs
99.4%
Avg purity
14
Labs
Vilon
11
COAs
99.7%
Avg purity
6
Labs
DSIP 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. Vilon 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.
Schoenenberger & Monnier first isolated and characterized DSIP in 1977 (PNAS 74(3):1282-6, PMID 265572). Graf & Kastin's 1984 review (Neurosci Biobehav Rev, PMID 6145137) summarized the first decade of work, noting reported effects on sleep, pain, and stress but also substantial inconsistency across labs and species. Schneider-Helmert (Eur Neurol 1986, PMID 3792404) reported sleep normalization in 18 middle-aged and elderly chronic insomniacs given DSIP over one week — small, open, and never replicated at scale. Schneider-Helmert et al. (Dtsch Med Wochenschr 1987, PMID 3582201) explored phase-shifted insomnia. Kovalzon & Strekalova (J Neurochem 2006, PMID 16539679) summarized the field as a 'still unresolved riddle,' noting that no DSIP receptor or gene has been identified. No Phase 3 trials, no FDA approval, no modern controlled replication.
Key references
Evidence is limited to Khavinson-group preclinical work. Khavinson & Anisimov (Dokl Biol Sci, 2000; PMID 10944717) reported that Vilon (L-Lys-L-Glu) inhibited spontaneous tumor growth and extended lifespan in CBA mice. A small Russian report on Vilon as an adjuvant in elderly colorectal-cancer patients (Kuznik et al., 2005; PMID 16075684) is non-randomized and unreplicated. No Western-framework clinical trials, pharmacokinetic, or dose-response studies have been published.
DSIP (Cognitive) and Vilon (Immune) 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.
Dosing Notes
Half-life
Side Effects
Contraindications
Lab Testing