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Growth Hormone / Endocrine · Intelligence File

Tesamorelin

FDA-approved GHRH analog (EGRIFTA WR), studied for pituitary GH release and clinically used to reduce visceral abdominal fat in HIV-associated lipodystrophy.

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7 sources reviewed
01

Plain Terms

Tesamorelin is a peptide studied for helping the body release more of its own growth hormone.

It is most known for its connection to belly fat reduction in a specific medical population: adults with HIV-associated lipodystrophy, a condition where fat distribution becomes abnormal, often causing excess deep abdominal fat around the organs.

Tesamorelin does not work like a stimulant, fat burner, or appetite suppressant. It works through the growth hormone pathway, signaling the pituitary to release more GH, which can influence fat metabolism, body composition, recovery biology, and IGF-1 activity.

It is not a general weight-loss drug and is not proven to melt belly fat in everyone. The most accurate framing is GH release, visceral fat reduction in HIV lipodystrophy, body composition research, metabolic signaling, and endocrine function.

02

Scientific Overview

Tesamorelin is a synthetic growth hormone-releasing factor (GHRF/GHRH) analog. It stimulates the pituitary to release endogenous GH. Different from HGH, which gives the body GH directly. Tesamorelin signals the body to release more of its own GH through the pituitary pathway.

GH plays a role in fat metabolism, tissue repair, protein metabolism, bone remodeling, recovery biology, and IGF-1 production. Because Tesamorelin increases GH secretion, it can also increase IGF-1 levels.

Within Growth Hormone / Endocrine, Tesamorelin sits on the GHRH-analog side, not GH itself, not IGF-1, not a GLP-1 weight-loss drug. It is an endocrine signaling peptide that stimulates the GH axis.

Tesamorelin's strongest human evidence is in HIV-associated lipodystrophy, especially excess visceral abdominal fat. The FDA-approved product EGRIFTA WR is indicated for reducing excess abdominal fat in HIV-infected adult patients with lipodystrophy. The label states EGRIFTA WR is not indicated for weight-loss management because it has a weight-neutral effect, and long-term cardiovascular safety has not been established.

Randomized controlled studies reported reductions in visceral fat of roughly 15% over 26 weeks and roughly 18% over 52 weeks, without major reductions in subcutaneous fat or BMI compared with placebo. A JAMA trial reported Tesamorelin significantly reduced visceral adipose tissue and liver fat over six months versus placebo in adults with HIV-associated abdominal fat accumulation.

03

Evidence Strength

Human clinical evidence is strong within the approved indication: multiple RCTs and FDA approval (EGRIFTA WR) support visceral fat reduction in HIV-associated lipodystrophy, with documented effects on visceral adipose tissue and liver fat.

Outside that indication, evidence is limited. Approved use is not general fat loss, bodybuilding, anti-aging, recovery, or wellness optimization. Broader use should be framed as research interest, not established benefit.

04

Safety & Regulatory Notes

Because Tesamorelin stimulates GH and increases IGF-1, the FDA label warns about elevated IGF-1 and recommends monitoring. The label also warns about fluid retention, glucose intolerance or diabetes, hypersensitivity reactions, injection-site reactions, and increased risk related to neoplasms.

Contraindications include active malignancy, pregnancy, hypersensitivity to tesamorelin, and disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis.

Glucose regulation is a key concern. GH activity can affect insulin sensitivity, and the label states Tesamorelin can result in glucose intolerance. Blood glucose should be evaluated before and during therapy in medical settings.

WADA lists GHRH and its analogs, including tesamorelin, as prohibited substances. Relevant to tested athletes and professional competitors.

05

Best Use Description

Tesamorelin is a synthetic GHRH analog studied for pituitary growth hormone release, IGF-1 signaling, visceral adipose tissue reduction in HIV-associated lipodystrophy, body composition research, fat metabolism, endocrine signaling, and growth hormone axis activity.

06

Positioning Summary

Tesamorelin is best positioned as a GHRH analog involved in endocrine signaling and body-composition research.

Its strongest practical relevance is the study of how GH signaling influences visceral fat, metabolic function, IGF-1 activity, and tissue-related repair pathways.

The most accurate framing is GH release and visceral fat research, especially in HIV-associated lipodystrophy, not guaranteed weight loss, general belly fat reduction, bodybuilding enhancement, anti-aging therapy, or disease treatment outside its approved indication.

07

Sources

Numbered citations supporting this educational writeup. External links open peer-reviewed literature, registered trials, or regulatory positions.

  1. [01]U.S. Food and Drug Administration. EGRIFTA WR (tesamorelin for injection) Prescribing Information. 2025.
  2. [02]Stanley TL, Feldpausch MN, Oh J, et al. Effect of Tesamorelin on Visceral Fat and Liver Fat in HIV-Infected Patients With Abdominal Fat Accumulation: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2014.
  3. [03]Russo SC, et al. Efficacy and Safety of Tesamorelin in People With HIV and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: A Randomized Trial. 2024.
  4. [04]Adrian S, et al. The Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone Analogue Tesamorelin in HIV-Associated Lipodystrophy. 2018.
  5. [05]Bedimo R, et al. Growth Hormone and Tesamorelin in the Management of HIV-Associated Lipodystrophy. 2011.
  6. [06]Clemmons DR, et al. Safety and Metabolic Effects of Tesamorelin, a Growth Hormone-Releasing Factor Analog, in Patients With HIV-Associated Abdominal Fat Accumulation. 2017.
  7. [07]World Anti-Doping Agency. The Prohibited List.

This page is for educational and research purposes only. It is not medical advice and does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a qualified medical professional before making health decisions.

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