EDITORIAL · INDEPENDENT · TRANSPARENCY-FIRST
About Clinic PT-141
An independent editorial reading of the PT-141 literature, built to hold verified evidence, honest gaps, and unverified field reports visibly apart.
What this site is
Clinic PT-141 is an independent editorial project that publishes summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on PT-141 (bremelanotide). We are not a clinic. We do not employ clinicians and we do not provide medical advice. We do not manufacture, sell, or distribute any product. Our work is editorial commentary on publicly available science.
The "clinic" in the name is editorial framing — the measured, who-studies-it position this publisher takes toward the literature — not a claim about services. There is no exam room, no prescriber, and no counter behind this site. It is a reading desk for one compound's published record.
How we read the evidence
The whole site is built around one idea: hold the evidence tiers apart so a reader is never misled. Cited trial findings and the FDA label are marked as verified evidence. Honest gaps — the modest effect sizes flagged by independent re-analyses, the off-label status of male use, a disputed source under a formal Expression of Concern — are marked as caution. The hard cardiovascular contraindication is marked at the highest tier. And the unverified community "field reports" are fenced into their own clearly-labeled, visually-separated layer that is never presented as evidence.
That structure is the point of a transparency-first reading. PT-141 is a genuinely approved, mechanism-novel melanocortin drug with a real but modest benefit and a real tolerability cost. Telling that story honestly means showing the promise and the limits in the same frame, each tagged for what it is.
What we do not do
We do not recommend doses, we do not give medical advice, and we do not sell, source, or supply PT-141 or any other compound. We report what the trials and the FDA label state, in the third person, attributed to source. Doses, half-lives, and endpoints appear as findings — never as instructions. Decisions about any drug belong between a person and a qualified clinician, with the prescribing information in hand. Our job is narrower and simpler: to read the published record clearly, and to keep what is verified separate from what is not.