Sermorelin is a synthetic 29-amino-acid peptide identical in sequence to residues 1–29 of native human growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) — the minimum N-terminal fragment retaining full pituitary GH-secretagogue activity. Among the GHRH-analog research catalogue, sermorelin is the most physiologically faithful: no enzymatic stabilisation, no albumin tether, and the resulting GH-release pattern remains subject to normal somatostatin-mediated negative feedback (Pedrolli et al. 2026, PMID 41946684; Mendias et al. 2026, PMID 41966639).
Sermorelin has the longest US human-clinical track record of any GHRH analog. Serono received FDA approval for sermorelin acetate (Geref) in 1997 for diagnosis and management of pediatric idiopathic growth-hormone deficiency. Marketing was discontinued in 2008 for commercial — not safety — reasons. Sermorelin was placed on the FDA’s interim 503A bulks Category 2 in September 2023 and removed from Category 2 on 27 September 2024 (Federal Register document 2024-24828); it remains under PCAC review as of 2026 and is not currently FDA-approved.
A new 2026 mechanism finding (Pedrolli et al., Cell Death & Disease, PMID 41946684) reports that GHRH-receptor agonism reduces amyloid-β deposition, suppresses glial activation, and lowers pro-inflammatory cytokine expression in the 5xFAD transgenic Alzheimer’s-disease mouse model — opening an emerging neuroprotective research direction for the GHRH-analog class. This is preclinical work and does not constitute a therapeutic claim.
Each Artemis Labs vial ships with a third-party Certificate of Analysis confirming identity (mass spectrometry), purity (≥99% by reverse-phase HPLC), and endotoxin testing (LAL assay, ≤0.5 EU/mg). Sermorelin is prohibited at all times under WADA Section S2 (Peptide Hormones, Growth Factors, Related Substances and Mimetics; Coutinho et al. 2026, PMID 41880199). For laboratory research use only — no human dosing, administration, therapeutic, diagnostic, or preventative claim is made.





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