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ForumsOther Peptides & Research CompoundsKPV peptide for inflammatory bowel — May 2025

KPV peptide for inflammatory bowel — May 2025

TomTeleRx Sat, Mar 28, 2026 at 10:17 PM 19 replies 1,022 viewsPage 1 of 4
TomTeleRx
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Feb 2025
Delaware
Mar 28, 2026 at 11:42 PM#1

I see storage questions come up constantly in this forum, so I wanted to put together a comprehensive guide on peptide stability and degradation. This applies to all research peptides — BPC-157, TB-500, semaglutide, the GH secretagogues, everything.

The basics of peptide degradation:

Peptides degrade through several mechanisms:

  1. Hydrolysis: Water attacks the peptide bond, cleaving the chain. Rate increases with temperature and extreme pH.
  2. Oxidation: Methionine and cysteine residues are particularly susceptible. Exposure to air, light, and metal ions accelerates this.
  3. Deamidation: Asparagine and glutamine residues convert to aspartate/glutamate. Significant at neutral-to-basic pH.
  4. Aggregation: Peptides can form dimers or higher-order aggregates, especially at high concentrations or after freeze-thaw cycles.

Understanding these mechanisms tells you exactly how to store your peptides to maximize shelf life. Let's break it down by form.

36 10pete_manc_UK, anna.melb_AU, mark_tokyo and 33 others
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PharmHunterJen
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Jul 2024
Illinois
Mar 28, 2026 at 11:59 PM#2

This is a much-needed resource. Let me add the practical storage recommendations organized by peptide form:

Lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder — MOST STABLE FORM:

  • Room temperature: stable for 1-2 years (in sealed vial, desiccated)
  • Refrigerated (2-8°C): stable for 2-4+ years
  • Frozen (-20°C): stable for 5+ years
  • Key: keep the vial sealed with the cap/septum intact. Moisture is the enemy of lyophilized peptides. The vacuum or nitrogen atmosphere in the sealed vial is protective.

Reconstituted solution (peptide + BAC water):

  • Room temperature: 1-3 days (unacceptable for regular use)
  • Refrigerated (2-8°C): 3-6 weeks depending on the peptide
  • Frozen (-20°C): 3-6 months (but see below on freeze-thaw)
  • The bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol) prevents microbial contamination but does nothing to prevent chemical degradation of the peptide itself.

Critical rule: DO NOT repeatedly freeze and thaw reconstituted peptides. Each freeze-thaw cycle can cause aggregation and loss of potency. If you freeze reconstituted peptide, aliquot it into single-use portions first.

17 24alex_tucson, kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE and 14 others
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GenomicsKate
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Oct 2024
Cambridge, MA
Mar 29, 2026 at 12:16 AM#3

This is great info. Quick question — I ordered a batch of BPC-157 vials (6 x 5 mg) and I won't use all of them for months. Should I keep the unopened lyophilized vials in the fridge or freezer?

12 0MarkLI_maint, Dr.PeteFamMed, claudia_zurich and 9 others
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quinn_sf
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Jun 2024
San Francisco, CA
Mar 29, 2026 at 12:33 AM#4

Fridge is perfectly fine for a few months. If you're storing for 6+ months, freezer is slightly better but honestly the difference at those timeframes for lyophilized peptides is minimal. The key thing is:

  • Keep them sealed (don't puncture the septum until you're ready to reconstitute)
  • Keep them away from light (store in a box or drawer in the fridge, not on a glass shelf)
  • Keep them dry (if you're worried about humidity in your fridge, put them in a sealed container with a desiccant packet)

Lyophilized peptides are remarkably stable. I've used BPC-157 vials that sat in my fridge for 8 months with no noticeable loss of efficacy. The peptide industry ships these at room temperature for a reason — they can handle a few days of transit without degradation.

11 21andrew_nyc, Dr.EndoEP, GraceAZ_72 and 8 others
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HPLC_Greg
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Feb 2024
Research Triangle, NC
Mar 29, 2026 at 12:50 AM#5

What about specific peptide stability differences? Not all peptides are created equal in terms of fragility.

From my experience and reading:

  • Most stable: BPC-157, TB-500, Ipamorelin — these are relatively robust peptides without highly labile residues. Reconstituted, they hold up well for 4-6 weeks refrigerated.
  • Moderately stable: CJC-1295 (with or without DAC), Selank, Semax — good for 3-4 weeks reconstituted and refrigerated.
  • Less stable: GnRH analogs, some growth factor peptides, and anything with multiple cysteine residues (disulfide bonds can scramble). Use within 2-3 weeks of reconstitution.
  • Semaglutide/tirzepatide: The pharmaceutical formulations are specifically designed for stability with excipients and pH buffers. The multi-dose pens are rated for 56 days (8 weeks) at room temperature once in use. These are among the most stable peptide products available because billions of pharma R&D dollars went into the formulation.
Last edited: Mar 29, 2026 at 6:50 AM
9 9SaraMom3, Dr.MetabolicMD, RetaRick_CA and 6 others
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