deleted.user.16
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We heard about sterility fails, we heard about endotoxin scares. One thing I've read about on other social media but surprisingly have not seen here are the risks that might come with developing antibodies to GLP meds. We know from the Retatrutide trials that a significant amount of people developed antibodies to it (from 4% of the people on 1mg to 18% in the 12mg group). And that's from the "legit" trial drugs; the drugs we are jabbing could possibly be significantly more degraded because of questionable manufacturing/shipping/storage methods from grey vendors and could result in even more antibodies.
The theory that I have heard is that these antibodies could not only neutralize our precious Chinese peptides but also bind our own GLP-1 hormones produced by our own bodies. This theory is based on many actual cases of this happening in the 90s with epoetin alfa (rHuEPO), a hormone used to stimulate production of red blood cells and also injected subcutaneously. Improper storage and handling (possibly from chemicals in the rubber stoppers in pre-filled syringes reacting with the protein) caused aggregation/degradation, causing the patients to produce antibodies that attack both the injected protein and the patient's own hormone.
I have not been able to find any follow-up information about how this was resolved for the patients (if the antibodies went away after stopping the drug or if these people needed blood transfusions regularly for the rest of their lives).
Now, I don't think the theoretical effects of GLP-1 antibodies would be nearly as dangerous as the effects of erythropoietin antibodies. Nobody would need blood transfusions; I think you would just be really hungry if you were low on GLP-1? What GIP or glucagon antibodies would theoretically do, I won't even attempt to speculate on because I have no idea.
If antibodies are at all a risk, it would really change the risk-to-reward calculation for a lot of people (like me) who are overweight or borderline obese, and do not plan to be GLP "lifers." At the very least, I wonder if it would be safer to switch from Reta to Tirz or Sema (more stable peptides) and start buying smaller vials to reduce the amount of time that the peptide sits after reconstitution.
I'm curious what the forum thinks. Does anyone have more info on this? I know a few of y'all have some medical and/or chemistry background so I'd be especially interested in your opinions.
The theory that I have heard is that these antibodies could not only neutralize our precious Chinese peptides but also bind our own GLP-1 hormones produced by our own bodies. This theory is based on many actual cases of this happening in the 90s with epoetin alfa (rHuEPO), a hormone used to stimulate production of red blood cells and also injected subcutaneously. Improper storage and handling (possibly from chemicals in the rubber stoppers in pre-filled syringes reacting with the protein) caused aggregation/degradation, causing the patients to produce antibodies that attack both the injected protein and the patient's own hormone.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15792922/quoted said:PRCA [Pure red cell aplasia] occurs from the generation of antibodies against rHuEPO, which neutralize not only the recombinant protein, but also native erythropoietin, resulting in the absence of red cell precursors in the bone marrow.
I have not been able to find any follow-up information about how this was resolved for the patients (if the antibodies went away after stopping the drug or if these people needed blood transfusions regularly for the rest of their lives).
Now, I don't think the theoretical effects of GLP-1 antibodies would be nearly as dangerous as the effects of erythropoietin antibodies. Nobody would need blood transfusions; I think you would just be really hungry if you were low on GLP-1? What GIP or glucagon antibodies would theoretically do, I won't even attempt to speculate on because I have no idea.
If antibodies are at all a risk, it would really change the risk-to-reward calculation for a lot of people (like me) who are overweight or borderline obese, and do not plan to be GLP "lifers." At the very least, I wonder if it would be safer to switch from Reta to Tirz or Sema (more stable peptides) and start buying smaller vials to reduce the amount of time that the peptide sits after reconstitution.
I'm curious what the forum thinks. Does anyone have more info on this? I know a few of y'all have some medical and/or chemistry background so I'd be especially interested in your opinions.

