PeptideGrids

The Peptide Evidence Gap: How 59+ Compounds Score on Human Evidence

Key Takeaways

  • 59 compounds graded across peptides and GLP-1 agents
  • 12 are FDA-approved drugs; 47 are not approved, withdrawn, or compounding-restricted
  • 34 of 59 (58%) have at least one randomized human trial (Grade A or B)
  • 11 compounds have preclinical-only or no evaluated evidence (Grade D / NE)

Grade distribution

GradeCountShare
Grade A: Approved and proven 12 20%
Grade B: Human evidence, not approved for this use 22 37%
Grade C: Preliminary or limited human evidence 14 24%
Grade D: Preclinical or anecdotal only 11 19%
Not evaluated 0 0%
Total59100%

Of 59 compounds graded, 12 are FDA-approved prescription drugs with established efficacy and safety data. The remaining 47 are sold or promoted despite lacking FDA approval, including compounds in restricted-compounding categories.

Only 34 compounds (58%) have evidence from randomized human trials, earning Grade A or B. The majority are supported by observational data, case series, or no human evidence at all.

11 compounds carry a Grade D or are not yet evaluated, meaning their evidence base is preclinical (animal or cell studies) or absent. These are sold despite no completed human efficacy data.

Methodology: how grades are assigned

Last updated: 2026-06-02