# Epitalon: Evidence, Mechanism, Dosing & Legal Status

> A clinical monograph on epitalon (epithalon, AEDG) — the synthetic pineal tetrapeptide marketed as a telomerase-activating geroprotector. Real circadian and cell-culture signals, no Western RCT, and a 2026 FDA inflection point.

*Published 2026-06-30 · Updated 2026-07-01 · By Elena Soto, PharmD*

The short answer
Epitalon (epithalon, AEDG) is one of the most talked-about longevity peptides and one of the least rigorously proven in humans. Its real human signals — circadian/melatonin restoration in older adults and telomere change in cultured cells — are small, mostly single-laboratory and largely unblinded, so the highest evidence grade is **B**. The famous 28% mortality figure belongs to the *extract* epithalamin, not the synthetic peptide, and is unreplicated in the West.[2](https://peptidevox.com/#r2)[9](https://peptidevox.com/#r9)

Epitalon — also written epithalon, and chemically the tetrapeptide Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly ("AEDG") — was developed by Vladimir Khavinson's St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology as the putative active fragment of the bovine pineal extract epithalamin.[4](https://peptidevox.com/#r4) It is marketed as a telomerase-activating geroprotector that lengthens telomeres and extends lifespan. Its popularity in longevity circles is enormous; its proof in humans is thin. This monograph separates the two.

*This article is informational and editorial content for research and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice, not a protocol to follow, and not a sourcing guide. Epitalon is not an FDA-approved drug; it is sold as a "research chemical not for human use." Dosing figures are reported strictly as seen in the published literature for completeness — not as recommendations. Telomerase-modulating compounds carry a theoretical oncologic concern. Consult a licensed clinician before any health decision.*

## What is epitalon and how does it work?

Epitalon is the tetrapeptide L-alanyl-L-glutamyl-L-aspartyl-glycine (AEDG), molecular formula C14H22N4O9, molar mass roughly 390 g/mol — a deliberately simplified analog of epithalamin, a crude bovine pineal-gland polypeptide extract.[4](https://peptidevox.com/#r4) It sits inside the "peptide bioregulation" theory that very short peptides modulate tissue-specific gene expression and aging.[8](https://peptidevox.com/#r8)

The headline mechanism — largely preclinical — is telomerase induction. Khavinson and colleagues reported in 2003 that epitalon induces telomerase (hTERT) activity and telomere elongation in human somatic cells, letting fetal fibroblasts proliferate past the usual Hayflick limit (from about 34 passages to over 44).[4](https://peptidevox.com/#r4) A 2025 independent in-vitro study from Brunel University partly replicated this: three weeks of epitalon elongated telomeres with hTERT upregulation and TRAP-confirmed telomerase activity in normal human fibroblast and epithelial cells, but in breast-cancer lines telomeres lengthened predominantly via the [Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT) pathway](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12411320/) rather than telomerase.[1](https://peptidevox.com/#r1) The second mechanism is pineal and circadian: epitalon and epithalamin are reported to restore nocturnal melatonin secretion and shift clock-gene expression in aged subjects.[7](https://peptidevox.com/#r7) Notably, the synthetic peptide failed to raise melatonin in rats while raising it in older primates — a species discrepancy that should temper confidence.[8](https://peptidevox.com/#r8) Additional reported effects include epigenetic chromatin remodeling and rodent antioxidant-enzyme upregulation.[4](https://peptidevox.com/#r4) No rigorous published human pharmacokinetics (half-life, Cmax, AUC) exist for epitalon specifically.[12](https://peptidevox.com/#r12)

## What is the evidence by indication?

Human evidence is consistently small, single-laboratory and largely unblinded, and the strongest longevity numbers belong to the extract, not the pure AEDG peptide. Independent Western replication is essentially limited to one 2025 in-vitro study. The table below grades each indication accordingly.

  Epitalon evidence by indication

    IndicationBest evidenceGrade

    Circadian rhythm / melatonin restorationSmall human studies in aged subjects; ~n=75 placebo-controlled sublingual studyB (human, small/weak)
    Telomerase activation / telomere elongationCultured human cells & lymphocytes; 2025 independent in-vitro replicationB (cell) / C (clinical translation)
    Longevity / all-cause & CV mortality12-year & cohort studies — but using the extract epithalamin, unblinded, single-groupB/C (extract, unblinded)
    Retinitis pigmentosa / retinal diseaseOne clinical claim plus rat parabulbar-injection work the reviewers call impracticalC/D (weak, unreplicated)
    Lifespan / oncostatic effects in animalsExtended lifespan and reduced tumors/metastases in rodentsC (preclinical, supportive only)

The circadian thread is the most physiologically coherent. Human studies report restored nocturnal melatonin in aged subjects with low baseline pineal function and normalization of the melatonin rhythm, with effects largest in those with the most age-related decline.[3](https://peptidevox.com/#r3) A small placebo-controlled sublingual study reported clock-gene shifts and a rise in urinary 6-sulfatoxymelatonin.[7](https://peptidevox.com/#r7) The telomere thread is real in cell culture — roughly a 33% mean lymphocyte telomere increase was reported, varying widely between individuals — now partly replicated independently in 2025, but whether this translates to telomere lengthening in living human tissue is unestablished, because no controlled in-vivo human trial has measured pre/post telomere length.[1](https://peptidevox.com/#r1)

The most-cited human result deserves a precise caveat. A 12-year controlled study in elderly coronary patients reported about 28% lower overall mortality and roughly two-fold lower cardiovascular mortality — but it used **epithalamine, the extract, not synthetic AEDG**, was unblinded, came from one research group, and remains unreplicated in the West.[2](https://peptidevox.com/#r2) A separate cohort reported mortality reductions of 1.6 to 1.8-fold with epithalamin alone.[4](https://peptidevox.com/#r4) Marketing the peptide as "lifespan-extending in humans" is, by the source monograph's own grading, Grade D.[9](https://peptidevox.com/#r9)

Proven vs hyped
Proven (Grade B): plausible circadian/melatonin restoration in older adults and telomere change in cultured cells. Hyped (Grade D): "extends human lifespan / lengthens your telomeres in vivo." The single most credible recent development is the 2025 Brunel in-vitro replication — which also flagged an ALT pathway in cancer cells, sharpening the oncologic question rather than resolving it.[1](https://peptidevox.com/#r1)

## What doses appear in the literature?

Reported strictly as information, not a protocol. The original extract trials of epithalamin used 10 mg intramuscularly, five injections at three-day intervals, repeated every six months — the regimen underlying the 12-year mortality study.[2](https://peptidevox.com/#r2) For synthetic epitalon, commonly described "Russian-protocol" patterns (community and research-context, not trial-validated) cite roughly 5 to 10 mg per day subcutaneously or intramuscularly for 10 to 20 consecutive days, repeated one to three times per year with intermittent pulsed schedules also described.[12](https://peptidevox.com/#r12) Epitalon is orally inactive due to digestive proteolysis, so it is given by injection; intranasal use is described but with markedly lower bioavailability, requiring two to three times the dose per community sources.[12](https://peptidevox.com/#r12) Handling notes describe reconstituting lyophilized powder with bacteriostatic water and avoiding freeze-thaw.[13](https://peptidevox.com/#r13) Reported higher doses above 20 mg/day show no clearer benefit in the available literature.[12](https://peptidevox.com/#r12)

## How safe is epitalon?

Reported adverse events are minimal in the small, short, mostly unblinded studies and anecdotal reports, with injection-site redness or itching the most common issue and no reported endocrine disruption.[8](https://peptidevox.com/#r8) The honest limitation is the absence of any long-term pharmacovigilance or large RCT safety dataset — non-approved peptides including epitalon lack long-term human safety data from large trials, and only the all-L form has been studied.[7](https://peptidevox.com/#r7) The central theoretical concern is oncologic: because epitalon modulates telomerase, activation could in principle support survival of pre-malignant or malignant cells. The 2025 in-vitro work showed cancer cell lines elongating telomeres via ALT while normal cells used telomerase; the authors infer it "can be safely used in healthy individuals," but this is a 2D in-vitro inference, not a human safety finding.[1](https://peptidevox.com/#r1) Paradoxically, rodent studies show reduced spontaneous tumor incidence — too much and too little telomerase can both be problematic.[7](https://peptidevox.com/#r7) Prudent contraindications include active or prior cancer, pregnancy, lactation and pediatric use, and use without medical supervision is discouraged.

## What is the FDA and WADA status in 2026?

Epitalon is not FDA-approved for any indication.[8](https://peptidevox.com/#r8) The 2026 regulatory timeline is the headline: it was among roughly a dozen peptides removed from the 503A interim Category 2 list on April 15, 2026 — but removal from Category 2 does not authorize compounding.[5](https://peptidevox.com/#r5) It is now under active Pharmacy Compounding Advisory Committee review: the committee meets July 23-24, 2026 at FDA White Oak, and on [July 24, 2026](https://www.fda.gov/advisory-committees/advisory-committee-calendar/july-23-24-2026-meeting-pharmacy-compounding-advisory-committee-07232026) will discuss epitalon-related bulk substances (free base and acetate) for possible inclusion on the Section 503A Bulks List, alongside Emideltide (DSIP) and Semax.[6](https://peptidevox.com/#r6) Recommendations are non-binding; the FDA decides, weighing physicochemical characterization, safety, evidence of effectiveness, and historical compounding use.[5](https://peptidevox.com/#r5) Until and unless it is added to that list, epitalon is not within the FDA's enforcement-discretion framework for compounding, and is sold as a research chemical labeled "not for human use."[8](https://peptidevox.com/#r8)

Internationally, epitalon is not authorized as a medicinal product by the EMA, is reportedly registered or used as a pharmaceutical in Russia and parts of Eastern Europe, and is classified as an unapproved new substance in Canada and Australia.[11](https://peptidevox.com/#r11) For athletes the guidance is cautious: epitalon is not explicitly named on the WADA Prohibited List, but as a substance not approved by any government regulatory authority it plausibly falls under category S0 (Non-Approved Substances) and should be treated as prohibited at all times in WADA-governed sport.[10](https://peptidevox.com/#r10)

**Bottom line.** Epitalon pairs a physiologically coherent circadian-melatonin signal and a real cell-culture telomere effect with a near-total absence of blinded Western human proof. The famous mortality numbers belong to the extract, not the synthetic peptide, and the lifespan marketing runs well ahead of the evidence (Grade D). From a root-cause standpoint the circadian thread is the most defensible reason for interest; the telomerase/cancer balance remains unresolved. Legally it sits at a 2026 inflection point — off Category 2, awaiting the July 24, 2026 PCAC decision. Regulatory facts here are current as of June 2026 and should be re-verified after that hearing.

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Source: https://peptidevox.com/peptide-encyclopedia/epitalon
Index: https://peptidevox.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://peptidevox.com/llms-full.txt
