Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of Epitalon and Thymalin — mechanism, dosing, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
Epitalon (also Epithalon, AEDG) is a synthetic tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) developed by Vladimir Khavinson at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology as a synthetic analog of the bovine pineal extract Epithalamin. It is a research-only bioregulator — not FDA-approved and not included in any major Western clinical guideline.
Thymalin is a heterogeneous polypeptide extract from calf thymus (a mixture, not a single defined peptide) developed in the 1970s by V. Kh. Khavinson and V. G. Morozov at the Military Medical Academy / St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology. Registered as a pharmaceutical in the USSR/Russia for immunocorrection. Distinct from Thymulin (Bach's zinc-dependent nonapeptide pGlu-Ala-Lys-Ser-Gln-Gly-Gly-Ser-Asn, originally called FTS) and from Thymosin alpha-1 (a 28-amino-acid synthetic peptide). Not FDA-approved in the US; research-use only.
Epitalon
Thymalin
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Dose Range
Route
Frequency
COA-verified vendors · trust score ≥70 required · single-vial price — bulk/bundle deals may be lower
Epitalon
Thymalin
COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
Epitalon
87
COAs
99.3%
Avg purity
14
Labs
Thymalin
13
COAs
99.5%
Avg purity
6
Labs
The evidence base is dominated by the Khavinson group. A 2003 paper in Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine (Khavinson, Bondarev, Butyugov; PMID 12937682) reported telomerase activation and telomere elongation in cultured human fetal fibroblasts. Additional Khavinson-group papers and reviews (e.g. 'Peptides and Ageing,' PMID 12374906) describe melatonin-rhythm normalization and claimed geroprotective effects in elderly Russian patients treated with epithalamin or epitalon in open-label / small-cohort studies over 6–12 year follow-up. These clinical studies have significant methodological limitations (open-label design, single-center, limited controls) and have NOT been independently replicated in rigorous Western controlled trials. There are no Phase 2/3 trials, no FDA approval, and no inclusion in Western clinical guidelines. Grey-market dosing of 5–10 mg SubQ daily for 10–20 day cycles, 1–2 times per year, is not clinically validated for any endpoint.
Key references
Evidence base is almost entirely single-lab (Khavinson/Morozov, St. Petersburg). Long-term observational work in elderly Russian cohorts reported reduced all-cause mortality and lower incidence of respiratory infections with Thymalin (alone or with Epithalamin) over 6–8 years, but these were not blinded Western RCTs and have not been independently reproduced. No FDA-registered clinical trials.
Epitalon (Cosmetic) and Thymalin (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