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Tesofensine Half-Life: How Long It Stays in Your System

Quick Answer

Direct answer: Tesofensine has a half-life of varies (minutes for sermorelin; days for CJC-1295 DAC; hours for MK-677). That's why it is dosed once daily to once weekly depending on agent.

Tesofensine at a glance:

  • Drug class: Growth hormone secretagogue
  • Route: subcutaneous injection (peptides) or oral (small molecules)
  • Typical frequency: once daily to once weekly depending on agent
  • Half-life: varies (minutes for sermorelin; days for CJC-1295 DAC; hours for MK-677)

The half-life of Tesofensine (varies (minutes for sermorelin; days for CJC-1295 DAC; hours for MK-677)) is the single most important number for understanding why it's dosed the way it is. Below we unpack the practical implications.

Half-Life Defined

The half-life is the time it takes for the concentration of a drug in the bloodstream to fall by half. It governs how often a drug needs to be dosed to maintain therapeutic levels and how long the drug persists after the last dose.

For Tesofensine, the half-life is varies (minutes for sermorelin; days for CJC-1295 DAC; hours for MK-677). That number explains the once daily to once weekly depending on agent dosing schedule.

Time to Steady State

After starting (or changing) a dose, drug levels reach a new "steady state" after about 5 half-lives.

For Tesofensine: practical steady state takes ~5x the half-life listed above. That's why dose changes don't show their full effect immediately.

How Long Tesofensine Stays in Your System

A common question: "if I stop Tesofensine, how long does it stay in my body?"

The standard rule of thumb is that a drug is essentially cleared after 5 half-lives. For Tesofensine: that's approximately 5 times that interval. Effects on appetite, glucose, or other targets persist for a similar period before fully resolving.

For this compound, downstream effects depend on the cellular pathways involved.

Practical Implications

A long half-life:

  • Allows less frequent dosing (better adherence)
  • Smooths out peaks and troughs (often better tolerability)
  • Means dose changes take longer to fully express
  • Creates a longer "runway" if a dose is missed

A short half-life:

  • Requires more frequent dosing
  • Produces sharper concentration peaks (and matching side effects)
  • Allows faster dose adjustments
  • Provides faster clearance if stopped

Tesofensine, with its long half-life, falls on the long end of this spectrum.

Half-Life and Missed Doses

If a dose is missed:

  • Take the missed dose as soon as you remember if you're well within the dosing interval
  • Skip it if you're closer to the next dose
  • Never double up

The longer the half-life, the more forgiving the missed-dose window. For Tesofensine, the missed-dose window is relatively forgiving.

Half-Life Across the Drug Class

Within the broader class of growth hormone secretagogue, half-lives vary significantly. Half-life variation across the class affects dosing frequency and tolerability profiles. See our comparison pages for direct comparisons.

Bottom Line

The varies (minutes for sermorelin; days for CJC-1295 DAC; hours for MK-677) half-life of Tesofensine is what makes its once daily to once weekly depending on agent schedule work. Shorter half-lives need more frequent dosing; longer ones offer more flexibility.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources

This page is informational only and is not medical advice.

Last updated: 2026-04-29 · For informational purposes only. Consult a healthcare provider.