Important regulatory notice. BPC-157 is not licensed by the MHRA for human or veterinary use in the United Kingdom. It is supplied to the laboratory market as a research-use-only reference compound. This page is a literature-context overview of the published research record on BPC-157. It is not personal-use guidance and Peptides Lab UK does not endorse any human or veterinary use of BPC-157.
Quick research summary. BPC-157 is a 15-amino-acid synthetic peptide derived from a sequence in human gastric juice (Body Protection Compound). The published research record on BPC-157 spans more than 100 papers, dominated by in-vitro and small-animal model work, with the bulk of in-vivo data conducted in rodent models of soft-tissue and gastrointestinal injury. Independent reviewers note that there is currently very limited published human clinical-trial data and no MHRA, EMA or FDA marketing authorisation for any indication.
UK regulatory position
BPC-157 has not received a UK marketing authorisation. The MHRA in April 2026 opened investigations into UK clinics making therapeutic claims about unregulated peptide products (reported by The Guardian on 4 April 2026). Personal-use claims about BPC-157 efficacy bring the product inside the Human Medicines Regulations 2012. Reputable UK suppliers do not make those claims.
What the in-vitro literature reports
Cell-culture studies have described effects of BPC-157 on fibroblast and tendon-derived cell populations, with reported observations on cellular migration, gene expression in growth-factor pathways, and proliferation kinetics. These are laboratory observations in cell-culture systems and do not translate one-for-one to human outcomes.
What the rodent-model literature reports
The rodent-model literature is the largest single body of BPC-157 evidence. Reported endpoints include observations in models of tendon injury, ligament injury, gastrointestinal mucosal injury, and bone-healing models. Doses, routes and time courses vary widely between protocols and are study-specific. Findings in rodent models have not been replicated in large human clinical trials.
What human evidence exists
Published human clinical-trial data for BPC-157 is sparse and is not part of any MHRA-approved licensing dossier. Anecdotal user reports exist in significant volume online but do not constitute clinical evidence at a regulatory standard. The MHRA position on therapeutic claims about unregulated peptides applies to BPC-157 in particular because of the gap between the strength of consumer marketing and the absence of human-trial evidence.
For laboratory researchers
BPC-157 is widely used as a research reference compound in in-vitro and small-animal model work. For any research-grade reference sample, quality requirements are batch-specific certificate of analysis, third-party HPLC purity data, mass-spectrometry identity confirmation, and clear research-use-only labelling. Peptides Lab UK supplies BPC-157 on that basis.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is BPC-157 licensed in the UK?
No. BPC-157 has not received MHRA, EMA or FDA marketing authorisation for any indication.
What is the published evidence base?
Predominantly in-vitro and rodent-model studies. Published human clinical-trial data is sparse and is not part of any regulatory licensing dossier.
Why does Peptides Lab UK not publish efficacy claims?
Because BPC-157 is not a licensed medicine in the United Kingdom. Publishing efficacy claims about an unlicensed substance brings the seller inside the medicines regulatory framework.
Where can I read the original literature?
The peer-reviewed BPC-157 literature is indexed on PubMed. Key author groups include Sikiric and colleagues at the University of Zagreb.
Research use only. Peptides Lab UK supplies research-use-only laboratory reference compounds with batch-specific certificates of analysis. Products are not for human or veterinary use.
