HCG vs Pitavastatin
FDA Approved vs FDA Approved
synergistic Mechanism-based · 70% Pitavastatin helps manage estrogen conversion from HCG. This is a common and recommended combination. Adjust AI dose based on bloodwork — avoid crashing estrogen.
Molecular Data
HCG Pitavastatin
Weight 36,700 Da 421.46 Da
Half-life 24-36 hours ~12 hours
Chain 237 amino acids (alpha: 92, beta: 145) —
Type Heterodimeric glycoprotein Synthetic statin (C25H24FNO4)
Key Benefits
HCG
01 Maintains testicular function during TRT
02 Preserves fertility and prevents testicular atrophy
03 Stimulates endogenous testosterone production
04 Induces ovulation in women
05 FDA-approved for multiple indications
06 Well-established safety profile
Pitavastatin
01 Minimal CYP450 metabolism — does not interact with CYP3A4, making it ideal for users taking multiple compounds
02 Lowest risk of new-onset diabetes among all statins, supported by the LIVES study and J-PREDICT trial data
03 LDL reductions of 38-45% at standard doses (2-4 mg/day)
04 More robust HDL-raising effect (5-15%) compared to other statins in the class
05 12-hour half-life supports convenient once-daily dosing
06 Favorable safety profile with low incidence of muscle-related side effects
07 Compatible with CYP3A4 inhibitors and inducers that would alter levels of other statins
08 Effective at counteracting AAS-induced lipid disturbances without adding to drug interaction burden
Dosing Protocols
HCG
250-1500 IU (lower for TRT adjunct, higher for fertility) / 2-3 times weekly, or every other day for lower doses
TRT Adjunct (Low) 250-500 IU Every other day
TRT Adjunct (Standard) 500-1000 IU Twice weekly
HCG Monotherapy 1500-2000 IU 2-3x weekly
Fertility (with FSH) 1500-2000 IU 2-3x weekly
Cryptorchidism (Pediatric) 1000-5000 IU 2-3x weekly for 3-4 weeks
Ovulation Trigger (Female) 5000-10,000 IU Single dose
PCT Protocol 1000-1500 IU Every other day for 2-3 weeks
Pitavastatin
1-4 mg/day / Once daily
Side Effects
HCG
Gynecomastia (breast tenderness/swelling) due to increased estrogen
Headaches, irritability, and mood swings (especially initially)
Fluid retention and edema
Potential antibody formation with long-term use
Pitavastatin
Myalgia and muscle discomfort (approximately 3-5% of users) — generally mild and less frequent than with lipophilic statins
Headache
Minimal liver enzyme elevation — typically transient and clinically insignificant
Back pain
Constipation or diarrhea
Contraindications
Hormone-sensitive cancers (prostate, breast)
Pregnancy (except as prescribed)
Precocious puberty risk in children
Active liver disease or unexplained persistent elevations in hepatic transaminases
Known hypersensitivity to pitavastatin or any excipients
Pregnancy and breastfeeding (Category X — statins are teratogenic)
Concomitant use with cyclosporine (significantly increases pitavastatin levels via OATP1B1 inhibition)
Concomitant use with lopinavir/ritonavir or atazanavir/ritonavir combinations
Research Evidence
HCG Pitavastatin
Status FDA Approved FDA Approved
References 5 studies 5 studies
Latest 2024 2023
FDA Approved Yes Yes
This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.