Mar 13, 2026 at 4:29 AM#6
Not a noob question at all — this trips up a lot of people.
HPLC Purity (99.2%) — Of all the peptide-related material in the sample, 99.2% is the target semaglutide molecule. The remaining 0.8% are related impurities (truncated sequences, deamidation products, etc.)
Peptide Content (97.8%) — Of the total powder in the vial (by weight), 97.8% is actual peptide material. The remaining 2.2% is non-peptide stuff: residual water, counter-ions (acetate/TFA), salts from the manufacturing process.
So if you have a 10mg vial:
- 9.78mg is peptide material (peptide content)
- Of that 9.78mg, 9.70mg is actual semaglutide (HPLC purity applied)
Both numbers being high is what you want. Some vendors have high purity but lower peptide content, meaning you're getting less active ingredient per vial than labeled.
Last edited: Mar 13, 2026 at 7:29 AM
21 0jim_asheville, matt_MKE, Dr.ReproEndo and 18 others
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