Vilon vs Eloralintide
Side-by-side comparison of key properties, dosing, and research.
Immune SupportAnti-Aging & Longevity
VilonGLP-1 / Weight Loss Agonists
Eloralintide- Summary
- Vilon is a synthetic dipeptide (Lys-Glu) derived from the thymus gland extract Thymalin. The shortest immune-regulatory peptide known, Vilon modulates T-cell and NK-cell function, extends lifespan in animal models, and shows epigenetic anti-aging activity. It is one of the Khavinson peptide bioregulators.
- Eloralintide is a long-acting amylin analog under development by OPKO Health. Amylin is co-secreted with insulin and regulates post-meal glucose by slowing gastric emptying, suppressing glucagon, and promoting satiety. Eloralintide is designed for once-weekly dosing, differentiating it from the short-acting pramlintide (Symlin). It is being studied for obesity and type 2 diabetes as a complement to GLP-1 based therapies.
- Half-Life
- Very short as a free dipeptide; effects mediated via gene regulation
- ~7 days (estimated, long-acting design)
- Admin Route
- SubQ, Oral
- SubQ
- Research
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- Typical Dose
- 1–2 mg SC daily or 5–10 mg oral daily
- Under investigation in Phase 1/2 trials
- Frequency
- Once daily
- Once weekly
- Key Benefits
- Immune system modulation and restoration
- Lifespan extension (30–40% in animal studies)
- T-cell and NK-cell activation
- Epigenetic anti-aging activity
- Reduces oxidative stress markers
- Antioxidant gene upregulation
- May prevent age-related immune senescence
- Anti-tumor immune surveillance
- Once-weekly dosing (vs multiple daily injections for pramlintide)
- Appetite suppression via central amylin receptor activation
- Reduction in post-meal glucagon secretion
- Complementary mechanism to GLP-1 agonists for combination therapy
- Slows gastric emptying for prolonged satiety
- Potential additive weight loss when combined with GLP-1 agents
- Side Effects
- Excellent safety profile, decades of Russian clinical use
- Rare: mild injection site reaction
- Very rare: mild allergic reaction
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Decreased appetite
- Injection site reactions
- +1 more
- Stacks With
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