Educational content only. This page provides general information for educational purposes. It does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any treatment protocol.
17+ compounds tracked

Immune Support & Biologics Guide 2026

From thymic peptides that restore immune competence to monoclonal antibodies that precisely silence inflammatory pathways, immune biologics represent the most sophisticated category in modern medicine. This guide covers the full spectrum.

What Are Immune Peptides & Biologics?

Immune-modulating biologics span two distinct philosophies: immunostimulation (amplifying immune response in conditions of immune deficiency or chronic infection) and immunosuppression (dampening overactive immune responses in autoimmune disease, allergy, and inflammatory conditions).

Thymic peptides — thymosin alpha-1, thymalin, thymogen — are derived from or mimic peptides produced by the thymus gland. The thymus is the master teacher of the adaptive immune system, programming T-cells to distinguish self from non-self. Thymic peptides restore T-cell function in aging, immune deficiency, and post-infectious states. Thymosin Alpha-1 is the most studied, with over 70 clinical trials and regulatory approval in 35+ countries for hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and as an adjuvant for cancer vaccines.

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) — adalimumab (Humira®), dupilumab (Dupixent®), etanercept (Enbrel®) — are engineered proteins that block specific inflammatory mediators. TNF-alpha inhibitors (adalimumab, etanercept) have transformed rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, and psoriasis treatment. IL-4/IL-13 blockade with dupilumab has similarly revolutionized atopic dermatitis and asthma management.

Nutritional immune support — glutathione, vitamin D, B-complex, biotin — represents the foundational layer that biologics are built upon. Optimizing these deficiencies before escalating to prescription biologics is standard integrative practice.

Immune & Biologic Compound Directory

Thymic Peptides

Monoclonal Antibodies

Nutritional Immune Support

Common Immune Protocols

Thymosin Alpha-1 Immune Restoration

Standard protocol used in integrative oncology and chronic viral infection management.

Thymosin Alpha-1: 1.6 mg SubQ twice weekly

Duration: 6-12 weeks (induction), then monthly maintenance

For cancer adjuvant: consult oncologist for protocol integration

Thymosin Alpha-1 is best known for its use in hepatitis B/C treatment (reduces viral load, improves interferon response) and as a cancer vaccine adjuvant. It has an excellent safety profile with decades of clinical use in Europe and Asia.

Glutathione IV Push Protocol

Used in integrative medicine for antioxidant support, detoxification, and skin health.

Glutathione: 600-1200 mg IV push (slow, over 10-15 min)

Frequency: 1-3x per week for induction (4-6 weeks)

Maintenance: weekly or biweekly

Alternative: 200 mg SubQ daily (reduced efficacy vs IV)

IV glutathione produces immediate antioxidant effects that oral supplementation cannot match due to poor GI absorption. Skin lightening effects are a common side effect due to reduced melanin synthesis. Ensure vitamin C co-administration to maintain reduced (active) form.

Vitamin D Optimization Protocol

Baseline test: 25-OH Vitamin D (target: 50-80 ng/mL)

If deficient (<30): Vitamin D3 50,000 IU IM weekly x 8 weeks

Then: 5,000-10,000 IU oral daily maintenance

Co-factors: Vitamin K2 (MK-7) 200 mcg daily, Magnesium 400 mg daily

Vitamin D deficiency affects 40%+ of the US population and is strongly associated with immune dysfunction, autoimmune disease, and increased infection susceptibility. Injectable loading doses correct deficiency faster than oral supplementation in malabsorption conditions.

Who Should Consider Immune Compounds?

Autoimmune Disease

RA, Crohn's, psoriasis, atopic dermatitis — monoclonal antibodies targeting TNF-alpha, IL-4/13, and CGRP have transformed outcomes. Work with a rheumatologist or dermatologist for appropriate selection.

Immunosenescence (Aging)

Thymic involution begins at puberty and accelerates after 60. Thymosin Alpha-1, thymalin, and thymogen can partially restore age-related T-cell function decline.

Chronic Viral Infection

Hepatitis B, hepatitis C (pre-DAA era), EBV, CMV reactivation. Thymosin Alpha-1 improves interferon response and viral clearance in multiple RCTs.

Nutritional Deficiency

B12, D3, and glutathione deficiencies are widespread and often missed. Injectable forms bypass GI absorption issues and correct deficiencies rapidly.

Monitoring & Safety

For Thymic Peptides

  • • CBC with differential (T-cell subset monitoring)
  • • Comprehensive metabolic panel
  • • Viral load monitoring (if treating hepatitis)
  • • Inflammatory markers: CRP, ESR
  • • NK cell activity if available

For Biologic mAbs

  • • TB test before starting TNF inhibitors
  • • Hepatitis B/C screening before immunosuppression
  • • CBC, CMP every 3-6 months
  • • Injection site reactions — monitor closely
  • • Infection risk elevated — avoid live vaccines
  • • Lymphoma risk with long-term TNF inhibitors

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Thymosin Alpha-1 approved for?

Thymosin Alpha-1 (Zadaxin®) is approved in 35+ countries for hepatitis B, hepatitis C (in combination with interferon), and as an immunostimulant in cancer treatment. It is not FDA-approved in the United States but is used off-label in integrative medicine practices.

How long does it take for biologics like Dupixent to work?

Dupilumab typically shows initial improvement in atopic dermatitis within 2-4 weeks, with maximum benefit at 16 weeks. Some patients see dramatic clearing within 4 weeks; others require 3-6 months of consistent treatment. Continued use generally maintains and improves results.

Can I take Thymosin Alpha-1 if I have an autoimmune condition?

This requires careful physician guidance. Thymosin Alpha-1 modulates immune function and has been used in some autoimmune contexts (particularly viral-triggered autoimmunity), but it is generally contraindicated when active autoimmune flares are present. The immunostimulating effects could theoretically worsen certain conditions.

Is IV glutathione worth it compared to oral?

Oral glutathione has poor bioavailability — most is broken down to constituent amino acids in the GI tract. IV glutathione delivers the intact molecule directly to tissues. Liposomal oral glutathione improves absorption significantly and is a reasonable middle ground. For acute clinical needs, IV is clearly superior.

Track Your Immune Protocol with Dosi

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Educational content only. Consult your healthcare provider before starting any protocol.