July 5, 2026

Peptide Bloodwork: Which Panels Map to Which Compounds, and When to Test

A practical cheat sheet for baseline and follow-up labs on common peptide and GLP-1 protocols — what to test, why, and how to line results up against your dose log.

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Tracking doses and side effects tells you how you feel. Bloodwork tells you what is happening underneath. One of the most-upvoted peptide threads of the last month was a full bloodwork cheat sheet — clear evidence that people want to connect compounds to the labs that actually reflect them. Here is a practical version.

The principle: baseline first, then follow up

The single most useful habit is a baseline panel before you start anything. Without a "before" number, a follow-up result is just a number floating in space. Test before, then re-test on a schedule that matches the compound.

General baseline panel (almost everyone)

Regardless of compound, a sensible baseline usually includes:

  • Complete blood count (CBC)
  • Comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP) — includes glucose, kidney, and liver markers
  • Lipid panel
  • HbA1c (average blood glucose)
  • Fasting insulin

Compound-to-panel cheat sheet

Compound classMost relevant markersWhy
GLP-1s (semaglutide, tirzepatide)HbA1c, fasting glucose, fasting insulin, lipidsThese are the metabolic outcomes the drugs act on
GH peptides (CJC-1295, ipamorelin)IGF-1, fasting glucose, HbA1cIGF-1 is the downstream marker of GH activity; watch glucose
Repair peptides (BPC-157, TB-500)CBC, CMP (liver/kidney)General safety monitoring; no specific efficacy marker
Any injectable protocolCMP (liver, kidney), CBCBaseline organ-function safety check

Note that IGF-1 is the practical stand-in for "is this GH peptide doing anything?" — GH itself is pulsatile and hard to measure on a random draw, so IGF-1 is the steadier signal.

When to re-test

Timing should match how fast the compound acts:

  • GLP-1s: HbA1c reflects roughly 3 months of glucose, so re-testing it sooner than about 8 to 12 weeks tells you little. Fasting glucose and lipids can be checked earlier.
  • GH peptides: IGF-1 can be re-checked after a few weeks at a stable dose.
  • Safety markers (CMP, CBC): a follow-up after 8 to 12 weeks on any new protocol is a reasonable general habit.

Line the labs up against your log

A lab result is far more useful next to your dose history. If HbA1c dropped, was the last month at a stable dose or mid-titration? If a liver marker moved, what else changed — a new compound, a new supplier batch? The value is in the overlay, not the isolated number.

Draw-day tips

  • Fast if the panel calls for it (glucose, insulin, lipids usually do).
  • Be consistent — same lab, similar time of day, similar hydration.
  • For GH peptides, note your last dose timing relative to the draw.

TrackPep lets you record lab values alongside your dose and weight history, so a bloodwork result sits on the same timeline as the protocol that produced it — not in a separate spreadsheet.

Educational only — not medical advice. Lab interpretation belongs with a licensed healthcare provider. Reference ranges and appropriate panels vary by individual.