Peptide supply for TRT clinics — the natural extension of hormone optimization.
Sermorelin, BPC-157, TB-500, and GLP-1 sourced through licensed 503A and 503B partner pharmacies. Operator-led service for clinics already running tightly regulated injectables.
Of every clinic type adding peptides right now, TRT practices have the shortest path. The compliance muscle is already built. The injection workflow is in place. The patient already trusts an operator who optimizes their hormones. Adding peptides on top of testosterone is the most natural cross-sell in the category — but the bottleneck is almost always sourcing. Most TRT clinics already have a compounding relationship for testosterone preparations, and that relationship rarely extends cleanly into sterile peptide compounding at the depth a serious program needs. Revival RX Partners is the supply layer that fixes that.
What TRT clinics actually source through Revival
Not every peptide belongs in a TRT clinic. The ones that do tend to fit one of three roles: growth-hormone-axis support, recovery and tissue repair, or metabolic add-on for the patient subset who need more than testosterone alone.
Most TRT clinics source these patient-specific through Revival's 503A partner pharmacies, which is the right path for individualized peptide dosing and titration. A subset of in-office injectables move through 503B partners when the clinic stocks for in-house administration. Revival opens both account types during onboarding so your medical director has the right supply path per compound, not a single supplier's narrow catalog.
- Sermorelin and Ipamorelin — growth hormone secretagogues for sleep quality, body composition, and recovery. Typical first peptide add to a testosterone protocol.
- CJC-1295 — often paired with Ipamorelin for sustained growth hormone secretagogue effect.
- BPC-157 — soft-tissue and gut healing. Cross-sells effortlessly to patients on TRT for performance or athletic reasons.
- TB-500 — tissue repair and recovery, frequently stacked with BPC-157.
- Semaglutide and Tirzepatide — GLP-1 and GLP-1/GIP for the patient subset where metabolic intervention belongs alongside hormone optimization.
How the account works
A Standard Account with Revival is free to open. No subscription, no monthly minimum, no setup fee. You apply, then book an intro call with Brad Fogeltanz, who runs the relationship personally. On that call he walks through which compounds your medical director wants to carry, maps them to the right 503A or 503B partner pharmacy, and outlines what onboarding looks like for a clinic already running testosterone protocols.
Within five business days, partner-pharmacy accounts are opened on your behalf, your protocols are mapped to the right supply path, and your team can place the first order. Prescriptions route through Revival's account; partner pharmacies dispense direct to the patient (503A) or ship office-use inventory to the clinic (503B). You pay per order.
Operator-level service is the rest of the story. Brad personally handles supply continuity, partner-pharmacy back-orders, new compound launches inside the partner network, and the operational questions a TRT clinic raises that a portal cannot answer. TRT operators consistently flag this as the reason they consolidate peptide supply onto Revival rather than chasing the lowest unit price across three suppliers.
Why Revival vs. a portal
Most TRT clinics have already tried the self-serve portal approach, often more than once. The pattern is familiar — onboard, place a few orders, hit a back-order or a state-specific prescribing question, and discover there is no operator on the other end who can move quickly. Peptide supply is not a checkout flow problem. It is an operating relationship.
Blue Atlas is a portal. Revival is an operator. The partner-pharmacy relationships are direct and the conversations are person-to-person. For a TRT clinic running monthly recurring patients on multiple protocols, the difference shows up in continuity — fewer surprises, faster fixes when a partner has a supply constraint, real notice when a new compound is entering the network.
There is also a clinical reason. TRT medical directors who layer peptides onto a hormone protocol want a supply partner who understands what a stacked protocol actually looks like in practice, not a catalog interface that treats every compound as independent. Brad has built peptide programs inside hormone clinics specifically and brings that operating context to every conversation.
Pricing — free to open
The Standard Account is free. No subscription, no monthly minimum, no setup fee. You pay per order at the partner pharmacy's published rate plus Revival's margin, which is built into the listed price. Multi-location TRT groups, MSOs, and clinics running serious peptide volume can move to the Concierge tier, which is custom-quoted based on order volume and account complexity rather than a fixed monthly fee.
Compliance and operational fit
TRT clinics already navigate tightly regulated medication every day — controlled-substance handling, DEA registration where applicable, state-specific telehealth rules, prescribing standards, documented patient evaluations. The compliance posture required for compounded peptides is materially lighter than what a TRT clinic already runs. Compounded peptides are dispensed by licensed 503A and 503B pharmacies under sections 503A and 503B of the FD&C Act, against a valid prescription. Your existing intake, evaluation, and prescribing workflow extends to peptides with minimal modification.
Compounded peptides are not FDA-approved as new drugs, and that distinction should be reflected accurately in your marketing, patient education, and consultation scripts. Revival's partner pharmacies operate under documented compliance posture, and Brad walks every new clinic through the language that protects the practice without overpromising what the literature supports.
TRT clinic peptide questions.
Do we need a different pharmacy partner than the one we use for testosterone?
Often, yes. Sterile peptide compounding has different specifications than the testosterone preparations most TRT clinics already source. Revival opens accounts with 503A and 503B partner pharmacies whose capability, batch sizing, and shipping logistics match peptide work specifically. Your existing testosterone supply does not have to change.
What does it cost to open an account?
Nothing. The Standard Account is free, with no subscription and no monthly minimum. You pay per order at the partner pharmacy rate plus Revival's margin, which is included in the listed price. Concierge is custom-quoted for multi-location operators and high-volume clinics.
Which peptide should we launch with first?
For most TRT clinics, a growth hormone secretagogue protocol — Sermorelin or Ipamorelin, often paired with CJC-1295 — is the cleanest first add. It pairs with the patient profile already in the chair and the medical director's existing comfort level. BPC-157 is the typical second protocol, with GLP-1 as a parallel metabolic track for the patient subset who need it.
How long does onboarding take?
Most TRT clinics can place their first peptide order within five business days of the intro call with Brad. Partner-pharmacy accounts are opened on your behalf, compounds are mapped to the right 503A or 503B path, and your team is briefed before the first prescription routes through.
Can peptides stack safely on top of TRT?
Yes — that is the most common configuration in the category. Growth hormone secretagogues like Sermorelin and Ipamorelin are routinely co-administered with testosterone protocols, as are BPC-157 and TB-500 for recovery. GLP-1 medications are added when metabolic intervention is clinically appropriate. Clinical decisions stay with your medical director; Revival is the supply layer.
Are compounded peptides FDA-approved?
No. They are dispensed by licensed 503A and 503B pharmacies under federal compounding regulations against a valid prescription. Marketing and patient education should reflect that distinction accurately.
How does this change our intake and consent workflow?
Minimally. TRT clinics already run a documented patient evaluation, prescription, and informed-consent workflow. Adding peptides requires protocol-specific consent language and patient education collateral, which Revival provides. The core clinical workflow does not change.