Bremelanotide
PT-141, Vyleesi
Grade A: Approved and proven
Key Takeaways
- Grade A: Approved and proven
- FDA approved: FDA-approved (2019) for acquired, generalized HSDD in premenopausal women; not approved for use in men or for any other indication.
- Compounding: Bremelanotide is FDA-approved as Vyleesi (subcutaneous injection) for premenopausal women with HSDD only. Compounded PT-141 is not FDA-approved for any indication, including use in men. Because an FDA-approved version exists, compounding is subject to restrictions; compounded preparations for uses other than the approved indication lack FDA evaluation of safety, efficacy, or manufacturing quality.
Mechanism
Bremelanotide is a melanocortin receptor agonist, primarily acting at MC4R in the central nervous system to modulate neural pathways involved in sexual desire.
Evidence
Bremelanotide (Vyleesi) is FDA-approved for the treatment of acquired, generalized hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) in premenopausal women, based on two Phase 3 randomized controlled trials enrolling approximately 1,200 women. In those trials, statistically significant improvements were observed in desire scores and distress scores compared to placebo, though effect sizes were modest and the clinical meaningfulness of those differences has been debated in peer-reviewed commentary. The drug is indicated for on-demand use rather than continuous daily administration. Evidence in men or for other sexual dysfunction diagnoses is not FDA-supported; compounded PT-141 sold for other purposes has not been evaluated for safety or efficacy by the FDA. No long-term outcome data beyond the pivotal trial period are available.
Safety and risks
Nausea is the most clinically significant adverse effect, occurring in approximately 40% of patients, requiring anti-emetic therapy in 13%, and causing treatment discontinuation in 8%; it was most severe at first injection and diminished with subsequent doses. Flushing occurred in approximately 20% of trial participants. Bremelanotide causes transient blood pressure increases peaking 2-4 hours post-dose, and the FDA label contraindicates use in patients with uncontrolled hypertension or known cardiovascular disease. Injection site reactions and headache are also commonly reported. Rare cases of hepatotoxicity with marked aminotransferase elevations have been reported post-approval, and the LiverTox database classifies bremelanotide as a possible rare cause of liver injury. Local hyperpigmentation at the injection site has been observed with repeated use. Compounded PT-141 lacks FDA oversight for purity, potency, or sterility, and is not approved for use in men.
Interactions
Contraindicated with use in patients on antihypertensive therapy where blood pressure is not well controlled; caution warranted with other medications that affect blood pressure or cardiovascular function. Concomitant use of drugs that slow gastric emptying may alter absorption of oral medications taken around the time of injection.
Federal compounding status
FDA-approved drug as of 2026-06-02.
An FDA-approved drug that should be obtained as the licensed product. It is not a 503A bulk-substance candidate; compounding from bulk is limited under federal rules and generally permitted only during a declared shortage.
Federal status only, from public FDA records. State pharmacy-board rules vary and are not covered here. This is regulatory reporting, not legal advice. All compounds.
Compounding legality
Bremelanotide is FDA-approved as Vyleesi (subcutaneous injection) for premenopausal women with HSDD only. Compounded PT-141 is not FDA-approved for any indication, including use in men. Because an FDA-approved version exists, compounding is subject to restrictions; compounded preparations for uses other than the approved indication lack FDA evaluation of safety, efficacy, or manufacturing quality.
Sources
- An evaluation of bremelanotide injection for the treatment of hypoactive sexual desire disorder. (2023) review
- Bremelanotide: First Approval. (2019) review
- Small Effects, Questionable Outcomes: Bremelanotide for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder. (2024) review
- Bremelanotide: New Drug Approved for Treating Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder. (2020) review
- The neurobiology of bremelanotide for the treatment of hypoactive sexual desire disorder in premenopausal women. (2022) review
- Bremelanotide (Vyleesi) for hypoactive sexual desire disorder. (2019) review
- PT-141 Palatin. (2004) review
- Bremelanotide for the Treatment of Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder: Two Randomized Phase 3 Trials. (2019) rct
- Re-Analyzing Phase III Bremelanotide Trials for "Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder" in Women. (2021) review
- Bremelanotide for female sexual dysfunctions in premenopausal women: a randomized, placebo-controlled dose-finding trial. (2016) rct
- Bremelanotide: an overview of preclinical CNS effects on female sexual function. (2007) other
- An effect on the subjective sexual response in premenopausal women with sexual arousal disorder by bremelanotide (PT-141), a melanocortin receptor agonist. (2006) rct
- Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of Bremelanotide for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder. (2019) other
- The Patient Experience of Premenopausal Women Treated with Bremelanotide for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder: RECONNECT Exit Study Results. (2021) rct
- Prespecified and Integrated Subgroup Analyses from the RECONNECT Phase 3 Studies of Bremelanotide. (2022) rct
- Responder Analyses from a Phase 2b Dose-Ranging Study of Bremelanotide. (2019) rct
- Female Syrian hamster analyses of bremelanotide, a US FDA approved drug for the treatment of female hypoactive sexual desire disorder. (2025) other
- Re: Bremelanotide for Female Sexual Dysfunctions in Premenopausal Women: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Dose-Finding Trial. (2016) other
Bremelanotide is FDA approved. PeptideGrids presents evidence and regulatory status for informational purposes only. We do not sell, supply, source, or help anyone obtain this compound, and we provide no dosing or administration guidance. This is not medical advice; consult a licensed clinician. Full disclaimer.
Last reviewed June 1, 2026 by PeptideGrids editorial team (independently audited).