← All research articles
Skin May 2026 5 min read

GHK-Cu Skin Protocol: What Physician-Prescribed Copper Peptide Therapy Looks Like

⚠️ For informational and educational purposes only. Not medical advice. All treatments require evaluation by a licensed physician. Do not self-administer any compound without medical supervision.
⚠️ For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Consult a licensed physician.

GHK-Cu: From Cosmetics to Prescription Medicine

GHK-Cu occupies an unusual position in the peptide landscape. It appears in premium cosmetic skincare formulations and in pharmaceutical wound healing research simultaneously. A physician-prescribed protocol is categorically different from a topical cosmetic — the route of administration, concentration, and clinical context are entirely different.

What the Research Shows

In vitro studies consistently show GHK-Cu stimulates fibroblast proliferation and collagen synthesis. A landmark 2012 study found it modulated over 4,000 genes related to tissue remodeling. Plasma levels of GHK decline significantly with age — from approximately 200 ng/ml at age 20 to 80 ng/ml by age 60 — which has driven interest in supplementation as a longevity intervention.

Protocol Structure

GHK-Cu protocols vary by administration route and clinical goal. Physicians consider topical, subcutaneous, and oral formulations depending on the indication. Protocol duration is typically 8-12 weeks with assessment of skin parameters at completion.

Currently Available

Unlike BPC-157 and TB-500, GHK-Cu was not affected by the Category 2 reclassification — it has been available through licensed compounding pharmacies throughout. My Body Labs includes GHK-Cu in its Skin and Collagen protocol.

Interested in physician-guided therapy?
Join our waitlist — launching July 2026
Founding member pricing · Personal onboarding call
Join waitlist →
« » ← All articles Have a question? →
For informational purposes only. My Body Labs is a telehealth technology platform. All treatments require evaluation and prescription from a licensed physician. Compounded medications are not FDA-approved finished products. Individual results vary. Not a substitute for professional medical advice.