Peptide Therapy vs. Oral Medication: Two Different Delivery Systems
Not just a different product — a genuinely different way of getting treatment into your system.
Swallowing a pill and receiving a peptide are fundamentally different delivery systems, not just different products with the same job. Understanding that difference matters more than most marketing pages let on.
How oral medication gets to work
A tablet travels through your digestive system, gets absorbed into your bloodstream, and circulates until it reaches its target. That absorption process is part of why timing instructions exist — food, stomach acidity, and individual metabolism all affect how quickly an oral medication takes effect.
How peptide therapy is different
Telos Rx's PT-141 (bremelanotide) doesn't go through the digestive system the same way — peptides are typically administered by a different route entirely, bypassing the absorption variables that affect pills. That's not automatically better or worse; it's a genuinely different mechanism with a genuinely different administration experience.
Telos Rx
Offers PT-141 (bremelanotide), a peptide-based option that works differently than oral ED medications — worth discussing with a clinician if pills haven't been the right fit for you.
View Offer Paid LinkWhat to actually weigh
If the idea of a non-pill administration method is a dealbreaker for you regardless of anything else, that's worth knowing before you start an evaluation with a peptide-focused provider. If you've found pills genuinely don't work for your situation, the different mechanism is exactly the point — not a downside to work around.