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Thymosin Alpha-1 vs PDA

Both Thymosin Alpha-1 and PDA are used for anti-inflammatory. Here's how their evidence, dosing, and regulatory status actually compare.

Thymosin Alpha-1

Evidence A

Thymosin Alpha-1 (Tα1)

A 28-amino-acid thymic peptide that matures and modulates T-cells. Used internationally as an adjunct in hepatitis, sepsis, and immune-compromised cancer care.

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PDA

Evidence C+

Pentadeca Arginate (PDA)

A 15-amino-acid arginate analog developed as a more stable, sometimes more bioavailable alternative to BPC-157. Limited published research; popular among compounding pharmacies in 2025–2026.

View full PDA profile →

Side-by-Side

AttributeThymosin Alpha-1PDA
Evidence GradeAC+
FDA StatusApproved in 35+ countries for hepatitis B/C, immune support; not FDA-approved in US (orphan-drug designations)Not FDA-approved — newer compounded analog of BPC-157
Typical Dose1.6 mg twice weekly (subcutaneous)200–500 mcg daily (subcutaneous)
Clinics Indexed19241
Categoriesimmune, anti-inflammatoryrecovery, anti-inflammatory

Key reported benefits — Thymosin Alpha-1

  • T-cell maturation
  • Antiviral immunity
  • Tumor immune support
  • Sepsis adjunct

Key reported benefits — PDA

  • Tissue repair
  • Anti-inflammation
  • Potentially better stability than BPC-157

Educational use only

This comparison is for educational purposes and not medical advice. Peptide selection should be made with a licensed medical professional based on your individual goals, health history, and current evidence quality.

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