Press Release
FormBlends Publishes 2026 State of Peptides Report as RFK-Era HHS Signals Major Shifts for GLP-1 and Peptide Therapy Access in the United States
Company positions itself as the central research hub for patients, clinicians, and compounding pharmacies tracking the fastest-moving area of American metabolic and longevity medicine.
MIAMI, FL, April 28th, 2026, FormBlends, a telehealth platform focused on medically supervised GLP-1 therapy and peptide research, today released its 2026 State of Peptides and GLP-1 Regulation report. The report maps how the Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Department of Health and Human Services, the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, and a pipeline of new obesity drugs from Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Roche are reshaping what Americans can legally access for weight management, metabolic health, and peptide therapy through the end of the decade.

Get the full, more detailed press release version here: https://formblends.com/report/state-of-peptides-and-glp1-regulation-2026
The full report is available at the full report on the FormBlends website and anchors the company’s research hub, which brings together FDA guidance documents, bulk substances list updates, ClinicalTrials.gov pipeline data, and plain-English explainers of every compound currently used in the GLP-1 and peptide space.
“We built this because nobody else was tracking all of it in one place,” said a FormBlends spokesperson. “Patients, compounding pharmacies, even clinicians are asking the same questions every week: what’s legal right now, what’s under review, what’s coming. The answer keeps changing. We decided to just keep up with it and publish the work.”
A New Era Under RFK Jr. and the Make America Healthy Again HHS
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confirmed as HHS Secretary in February 2025. It was the biggest reset of federal health priorities in twenty years. The administration’s Make America Healthy Again agenda put metabolic disease, ultra-processed food, and chronic illness at the center of the federal health conversation in a way the prior administration didn’t.
What’s changed for the peptide and GLP-1 world since then is harder to summarize than the political headlines suggest.
The tone has shifted. Kennedy has talked openly about using peptides himself, which on paper changes nothing, but in practice has changed what members of Congress, state medical boards, and health trade press are willing to say out loud. Peptides get discussed the way testosterone started getting discussed around 2015. That’s not a regulatory change. It’s a precondition for one.
On the compounding side, the agency’s 2023 to 2025 moves to end the GLP-1 shortage and tighten 503A rules drew a lot of public comments. Patient groups, compounding trade associations, and several state AGs asked FDA through 2025 to revisit how fast it unwound the shortage for semaglutide and tirzepatide, and to explain what happens to patients who can’t pay branded-drug list price. The new HHS has asked FDA to publish more data on how it calls shortages and to address access concerns. That’s slow, not dramatic, but it’s a different posture than the one before.
The bigger story is the peptide bulk substances review. A lot of compounds that had been compounded for years (BPC-157, Thymosin Beta-4, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, Sermorelin, and others) got moved to Category 2 on the FDA 503A list in September 2023, which ended most legal bulk compounding overnight. Industry groups and clinicians have been asking HHS to reconsider ever since. The 2026 budget request actually includes new language about “evidence review for therapeutic peptides,” which suggests at least some of those Category 2 designations will be looked at again before 2027. We don’t know which ones yet.
The report’s opening section walks through each of these themes, cites the specific Federal Register notices that triggered the current rules, and explains what patients can and cannot expect in the near term. Readers can find the full regulatory summary at the FormBlends science page.
The FDA Bulk Substances List and Why It Matters
Most conversations about the legality of peptides in the United States come back to one document: the FDA 503A Bulk Drug Substances list. That list is the clearest signal of which raw peptide powders a 503A compounding pharmacy can legally use for patient-specific prescriptions.
The list has three practical categories. Category 1 contains substances that FDA is willing to allow under the usual compounding rules while further review is done. Category 2 contains substances FDA has identified as having significant safety risks. Category 3 contains substances that have been reviewed and do not meet the criteria for inclusion.
In September 2023, FDA moved a set of peptides into Category 2. That single action ended most legal compounding of BPC-157, Thymosin Beta-4, CJC-1295 without DAC, Ipamorelin, KPV, Selank, Semax, and several others from 503A pharmacies. A parallel action through the 503B outsourcing facility rules limited the pathway for larger-scale compounding.
What changed in 2025 and 2026 is not the list itself but the posture toward it. FDA has opened a new public docket for therapeutic peptide review. The docket invites clinical evidence, pharmacovigilance data, and formal nominations for peptides to be reconsidered. HHS has signaled that the agency should move faster and that the existing list does not reflect current evidence for several compounds.
Peptides most commonly named in public comments and industry petitions as candidates for return to legal compounding include:
- BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound 157), a pentadecapeptide derived from a gastric protein. Used for tendon, ligament, and gut healing research. Blocked from 503A compounding since late 2023.
- TB-500 and Thymosin Beta-4, studied for tissue repair and cardiac recovery.
- CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin, growth hormone secretagogue peptides used historically for adult growth hormone support and recovery.
- Sermorelin, a growth hormone releasing hormone analog with decades of human data.
- KPV, a tripeptide fragment of alpha-MSH studied for gut inflammation.
- Selank and Semax, Russian-developed peptides with research in anxiety, cognition, and neuroprotection.
- Epithalon, studied for telomere biology.
- MOTS-c, a mitochondrial-derived peptide studied for metabolic function.
None of these are FDA-approved drugs. None are currently legal to compound from bulk for patient use in the United States. The report is careful to separate what is legal today, what is under review, and what would require an entirely new approval pathway.
The 2026 State of Peptides report explains the specific regulatory mechanics that would allow any of these to return to legal compounding, what clinical evidence FDA has said it wants to see, and which industry groups are funding the studies to produce that evidence. A searchable table of every peptide and its current legal status is maintained at the FormBlends peptide library.
The Two Paths Back to Legal Compounding
There are really only two ways a currently blocked peptide gets back into legal compounding in the United States.
The first is that FDA changes its view and moves the peptide out of Category 2 after a new evidence review. That would usually require a better safety package, cleaner manufacturing data, and more clarity about how the substance is actually being used in the real world.
The second is that the molecule goes through a full formal drug approval path, either for a branded product or for a narrower clinical use. That’s slower, more expensive, and much less likely for the majority of legacy peptides, but it’s the only route for compounds FDA decides are never appropriate for routine bulk compounding.
For most of the peptides people talk about online, the practical debate is about the first path, not the second. That’s why the evidence review docket matters so much.
What RFK Jr. Has Actually Said About Peptides
Public discussion around Kennedy and peptides tends to get sloppy fast. A lot of people jump from cultural tone to legal conclusion. The report does not do that.
What it does show is that Kennedy has repeatedly talked about metabolic dysfunction, chronic disease, and the need to rethink how the United States handles prevention and therapeutic access. He has also discussed peptides in a way that would have been politically unusual for a cabinet-level official under prior administrations.
That does not mean HHS is about to legalize every peptide in the gray market. It means the posture around evidence review, patient access, and the politics of metabolic medicine has changed.
The report includes a timeline of every public statement from Secretary Kennedy on peptide therapy since 2022, every Federal Register notice from FDA on the topic since 2023, and every relevant budget document from HHS in the 2026 fiscal year. That timeline is updated monthly at the FormBlends research hub.
The Obesity Pipeline Through 2028: 30+ Compounds in Active Development
The GLP-1 and obesity market is not standing still while regulators debate compounding. It’s moving faster than almost any therapeutic category in modern pharma. New triple agonists, oral small molecules, amylin combinations, and muscle-sparing add-ons are all competing to become the next standard of care.
The full pipeline map lives at the FormBlends pipeline tracker. What follows is every compound we think is worth watching through 2028.
Tier 1: Quintuple Agonists, the New Ceiling
Lilly Quintuple Agonist (preclinical). Eli Lilly, with the Indiana Biosciences Research Institute, has a single molecule that hits five receptors at once: GLP-1, GIP, glucagon, amylin, and calcitonin. The rat data is on the schedule for ADA 2026 on June 7, Poster 2839-LB, Jonathan Douros, PhD as lead investigator. The compound reportedly beat retatrutide for weight loss in obese rats. Rats aren’t humans. If it translates, this is a generational jump.
Tier 2: Quadruple Agonists
NA-931 / Bioglutide (Biomed Industries, Lloyd Tran, PhD). An oral small molecule covering GLP-1, GIP, glucagon, and IGF-1. A 13-week phase 2 in 125 adults reportedly produced up to 13.8 percent weight loss with no muscle loss, and 72 percent of participants hit 12 percent or more versus 2 percent on placebo (NCT06563753). The IGF-1 arm is the muscle-preservation bet. Problem: outside analysts have publicly challenged the credibility of the data, and none of it’s been peer reviewed. We’re including it because the signal, if real, is big. We aren’t treating it as settled.
Tier 3: Triple Agonists
Retatrutide (LY3437943, Eli Lilly). GLP-1 / GIP / glucagon triple agonist. The TRIUMPH and TRANSCEND phase 3 programs together enrolled over 5,800 patients. TRIUMPH-4 hit 28.7 percent weight loss at 68 weeks on the 12 mg dose, an average of 71.2 pounds off. TRANSCEND-T2D-1 hit 16.8 percent weight loss plus a 2.0 percentage point A1C drop in T2D. Seven more phase 3 readouts are due through 2026. FDA filing is expected late 2026, with a decision window opening 2027 to 2028. One thing to watch: 20.9 percent of patients at 12 mg reported dysesthesia (abnormal skin sensation). Whether that holds in the larger data set matters for the commercial story.
Survodutide (BI 456906, Boehringer Ingelheim and Zealand Pharma). A dual GLP-1 and glucagon agonist, not a true triple. Phase 2 data reported approximately 19 percent weight loss at 46 weeks without a plateau, and improvement in MASH without fibrosis worsening at 48 weeks. The SYNCHRONIZE phase 3 program in obesity and the LIVERAGE phase 3 program in MASH are both active. Key ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers include NCT06077864 (SYNCHRONIZE cardiovascular outcomes component) and NCT06309992 (MASH-focused phase 3). Survodutide is investigational in the United States, is not FDA approved as of April 2026, and is not legally available through United States compounding pharmacies outside approved clinical trial pathways.
Mazdutide (IBI362 / LY3305677, Innovent Biologics, licensed from Lilly). A GLP-1 and glucagon dual agonist. Approved in China in 2025. The DREAMS phase 3 program in China reported 14.0 percent weight loss versus 0.3 percent weight gain on placebo at 48 weeks. A 9 mg dose in obesity plus NAFLD reported 13.3 percent loss with 31.7 percent of participants achieving 15 percent or greater loss. DREAMS-3, the first head-to-head trial of mazdutide against semaglutide, is expected to complete in the first half of 2026.
BI 3034701 (Boehringer Ingelheim and Gubra). Boehringer’s second-generation triple agonist, positioned as a potential successor to survodutide. Phase 1 first-in-human trial is ongoing (NCT06352437). Limited public data.
Novo Nordisk Triple Agonist (licensed from United Biotechnology). Novo’s direct answer to retatrutide. Licensed from United Biotechnology in 2025 for a reported 200 million dollar upfront. Chinese-origin molecule. Post-Phase 1b and advancing. Limited public data.
Kailera Triple Agonist (Kailera Therapeutics). A well-funded preclinical GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon triple agonist. Kailera has raised approximately 600 million dollars to develop the asset for obesity and type 2 diabetes. Preclinical stage as of April 2026.
Tier 4: Dual Agonists
Amycretin / Zenagamtide (Novo Nordisk). A unimolecular GLP-1 and amylin dual agonist in both subcutaneous and oral formulations. Phase 3 programs for both formulations started in the first quarter of 2026. Novo materials increasingly refer to the phase 3 asset under the zenagamtide name. Phase 1b/2 reported approximately 22 percent weight loss. Phase 2 in diabetes reported 7.6 percent placebo-adjusted weight loss on the oral form with no plateau. A single-molecule dual mechanism is structurally different from the co-formulation approach of CagriSema, and Novo considers amycretin its flagship next-generation obesity asset.
MariTide (maridebart cafraglutide / AMG 133, Amgen). A long-acting peptide-antibody conjugate with GLP-1 receptor agonism and GIP receptor antagonism. Phase 3. The once-monthly or less-frequent dosing angle is the commercial story.
CagriSema (Novo Nordisk). A co-formulation of semaglutide plus cagrilintide, not a single molecule. Filed or near filing depending on market. Still one of the most commercially important next-generation assets because it leverages existing semaglutide infrastructure.
Pemvidutide (ALT-801, Altimmune). A unimolecular GLP-1 and glucagon dual agonist. Subcutaneous. Phase 2 wrapping up with MASH trials in parallel. End-of-Phase-2 alignment meeting with FDA was announced in November 2024. Phase 1 reported up to 10.3 percent weight loss at 12 weeks. The differentiation angle is body composition, lipid profile, and liver fat rather than pure weight-loss percentage, which may matter most if pemvidutide cannot match retatrutide on headline efficacy.
CT-388 (Roche, via Carmot Therapeutics). A dual GLP-1 and GIP agonist. Phase 2. Roche’s primary obesity asset following the Carmot Therapeutics acquisition.
AZD9550 + AZD6234 (AstraZeneca ASCEND program). A two-molecule combination, with AZD9550 as a GLP-1 and glucagon dual agonist and AZD6234 as a selective amylin agonist. Phase 2b combination trial (ASCEND) is active, and the individual assets are in phase 2. AstraZeneca positions this as a “triple mechanism” strategy across two molecules, aimed at fat-selective weight loss and organ protection. Part of a 1.2 billion dollar CSPC Pharmaceutical deal in February 2026 that expanded AstraZeneca’s obesity pipeline.
Ecnoglutide (XW003, Sciwind Biosciences). A biased GLP-1 agonist that favors cAMP signaling over beta-arrestin recruitment. Phase 3 (SLIMMER trial). Phase 3 reported 13.2 percent weight loss at 32 weeks at the 2.4 mg dose. Phase 2 reported up to 14.7 percent total body weight loss at 26 weeks. Biased signaling may amplify appetite suppression relative to standard GLP-1 agonists. Chinese-developed.
Tier 5: Next-Generation Single Agonists
Orforglipron (Eli Lilly, licensed from Chugai 2018). A once-daily oral small molecule GLP-1 agonist, not a peptide. FDA PDUFA date April 10, 2026, with approval considered imminent at the time of this release. Phase 3 reported 12.4 percent weight loss. A February 2026 Lancet publication reported superior A1C and weight outcomes compared with oral semaglutide in a head-to-head type 2 diabetes trial. The market-changing feature is no food or water restriction at dosing, which removes the adherence friction that has limited oral semaglutide uptake. Lilly has indicated launch pricing in the 149 to 399 dollars per month range through LillyDirect, which if accurate would reset the price floor for GLP-1 therapy globally.
PF-3944 / MET-097i (Pfizer, via Metsera acquisition November 2025). An ultra-long-acting, fully biased injectable GLP-1 agonist. Phase 3 (VESPER-4 registrational). VESPER-3 hit its primary endpoint at 28 weeks. Weight loss continued after a weekly-to-monthly dosing switch with no plateau. Monthly maintenance dosing is the commercial angle. Pfizer has indicated more than twenty obesity trials planned across 2026.
Aleniglipron (Structure Therapeutics). An oral small molecule GLP-1. Phase 2 complete. End-of-Phase-2 FDA meeting in the first quarter of 2026. Phase 3 expected mid-2026.
Danuglipron (Pfizer). An oral GLP-1. Phase 2b. Reported up to 13 percent placebo-adjusted weight loss at 32 weeks across dose groups.
Elecoglipron (AZD5004 / ECC5004, AstraZeneca and Eccogene). An oral small molecule GLP-1. Licensed from Shanghai biotech Eccogene in November 2023. Phase 1b topline from China reported in February 2026 showed 5.8 percent weight loss over 4 weeks with acceptable tolerability. Moving to phase 2.
GZR18 (Gan & Lee Pharmaceuticals, China). A bi-weekly injectable GLP-1. Phase 2b complete (CTR20231695). Reported 17.29 percent weight loss at 48 mg bi-weekly over 30 weeks, and 17.78 percent at 24 mg once weekly. The bi-weekly dosing cadence is the differentiation angle.
TG103 (CSPC Pharmaceutical Group, China). A GLP-1 Fc-fusion protein. Phase 3 (NCT05997576). Phase 1b reported 5.35 to 5.65 kg weight loss at 12 weeks across 15 to 30 mg doses. Extended half-life is the engineering story.
Tier 6: Amylin Pathway, the Muscle-Sparing Bets
Petrelintide (Roche and Zealand Pharma). A clean amylin analog monotherapy. Phase 2. The amylin pathway is attracting heavy investment as a muscle-sparing approach to weight loss, either as a standalone therapy for GLP-1-intolerant patients or as a combination partner.
Cagrilintide monotherapy (Novo Nordisk). An amylin and calcitonin dual agonist. Phase 2 as monotherapy and a component of CagriSema. 10.8 percent mean weight loss at 4.5 mg over 26 weeks as monotherapy.
AZD6234 (AstraZeneca). A selective amylin receptor agonist. Phase 2b (APRICUS), completing in 2026. Positioned for patients who cannot tolerate GLP-1s. Preclinical data suggested fat-selective loss with lean mass preservation.
Tier 7: Non-Incretin Mechanisms, the Backup and Combination Bets
The report also covers non-incretin programs that matter because they may eventually combine with GLP-1s, replace them in some subgroups, or become the lean-mass-preservation add-on category:
- Bimagrumab, the anti-activin receptor antibody now back in obesity conversations because of muscle-preservation data.
- Myostatin and activin pathway combinations aimed at preserving or increasing lean mass during aggressive weight loss.
- FGF21 analogs, especially where liver disease and triglyceride reduction matter more than scale weight.
- MC4R-pathway and rare-obesity assets that still influence payer and regulatory frameworks for the broader field.
What the Full Map Tells Us
The point of mapping this many compounds isn’t to pretend they’re all equal. They aren’t. A lot of these programs will fail. Some are clearly category-defining. Some are just noise around a few central winners.
What the full map does show is that the era of semaglutide and tirzepatide as the only serious reference points is ending. By 2028, the obesity market will likely include at least one oral standard-of-care option, multiple next-generation injectables, one or more amylin-centered strategies, and a much tougher reimbursement environment driven by actual competition.
That matters for compounding, because compounding economics only make sense in the gap between demand and branded access. The size of that gap is about to change.
Every one of these compounds has its own page in the report, at the FormBlends pipeline tracker. Each page links out to the published trial, the ClinicalTrials.gov entry, the company’s investor materials, and outside analyst commentary on likely launch timing.
Why the Pipeline Changes the Compounding Conversation
Most people talk about peptide regulation and the obesity pipeline as if they are separate stories. They are not.
The legal pathway for compounded access gets tighter at exactly the moment the branded pipeline gets more crowded. That means the market is moving in two directions at once: regulators are asking harder questions about what can be compounded, while pharma is racing to close the access gap with more compounds, more dosing formats, and eventually lower effective prices.
If oral GLP-1s hit the market at scale and come in well below today’s branded injectable price points, a lot of the business logic that fueled the compounding boom from 2022 to 2025 changes fast. The report walks through that dynamic in detail.
International Context
The United States is not the only country where peptide access is being rethought.
China has already approved several metabolic compounds that are still years away from the US market. Europe is taking a more conservative but increasingly active posture on obesity-drug reimbursement. The UK is experimenting with broader public-health framing around metabolic treatment access. Australia remains a useful case study for what happens when high consumer demand collides with pharmacy supply constraints.
The report includes a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction comparison of how peptide compounding, GLP-1 reimbursement, and investigational-compound access differ across these markets.
State-Level Activity
Federal policy is only one layer. State boards of pharmacy, medical boards, and attorneys general are shaping access too.
Several states have taken a more aggressive posture on telehealth GLP-1 advertising and compounding claims. Others have largely followed the federal line. A few states are becoming especially important because they host a disproportionate share of the compounding and telehealth infrastructure that serves the national market.
The report summarizes which state-level actions matter most for patients and clinics in 2026, and where enforcement risk appears to be rising fastest.
One Honest Note on Safety
The report is not bullish on everything. It is explicitly skeptical where skepticism is warranted.
A lot of compounds in the pipeline are being discussed with a level of certainty they have not earned yet. Some of the most exciting early-stage data comes from small studies, unreviewed presentations, or company materials that deserve a harder look than they usually get on social media. Some legacy peptides also have much weaker human evidence than the enthusiasm around them suggests.
That is part of why this report exists. It separates legal status from popularity, trial data from marketing language, and real evidence from narrative momentum.
The State of Peptide Research in 2026
Outside the GLP-1 category, peptide research is still expanding in multiple directions:
- Senolytic peptides that target senescent cells. FOXO4-DRI has generated attention since its 2017 publication in Cell, and newer analogs are in preclinical development.
- Mitochondrial-derived peptides including MOTS-c, humanin, and SHLP family peptides. Research is moving from animal models into early human studies in metabolic disease.
- Anti-fibrotic peptides for lung, kidney, and liver disease. Several candidates are in phase 1 or phase 2 trials sponsored by academic centers.
- Cardiac regeneration peptides including hydrogel-delivered peptide analogs for post-infarction repair.
- Immunomodulatory peptides including the thymosin family and newer antimicrobial peptides being studied for resistant infections.
- GLP-1 conjugates including peptide-drug conjugates that deliver payload molecules specifically to GLP-1 receptor-expressing tissues.
Some of these will remain research stories. Some will become commercial categories. The report tracks both because the edge between “wellness peptide,” “compounded therapeutic,” and “future approved drug” keeps moving.
Real-World Evidence on GLP-1s
At the same time, the published evidence base on the currently dominant GLP-1 drugs continues to get stronger. Cardiovascular outcomes data, sleep-apnea data, heart-failure data, and muscle-preservation work are all changing how clinicians think about obesity treatment.
FormBlends’ view is that by 2026, GLP-1s are no longer well understood if you think of them as just “weight-loss drugs.” They are becoming a broader metabolic platform. That matters for how the next peptide categories will be evaluated.
Plain-English summaries of each research area live at the FormBlends research hub.
What FormBlends Offers and What It Doesn’t
The company said the point of the report is not to imply that every investigational compound is available through FormBlends, or that every peptide discussed is legal to prescribe today.
“A big part of the trust problem in this category is that companies blur what is approved, what is compounded, what is still a research compound, and what is basically just internet mythology,” the spokesperson said. “We are trying to do the opposite of that.”
FormBlends currently offers medically supervised GLP-1 access and a growing research library on peptide therapy. The company does not claim that unapproved investigational obesity drugs are available through its platform. The report distinguishes clearly between approved therapies, legally compounded therapies, investigational compounds in trials, and substances that are not currently lawful for routine patient compounding.
How the Research Library Actually Gets Built
The company said the research hub is updated monthly and, for fast-moving regulatory pages, more often than that. Each major page includes:
- Current FDA status
- Current DEA status where it applies
- Pharmacology summary with named studies
- Currently enrolling trials pulled from ClinicalTrials.gov
- Known safety signals
- Jurisdictional notes for the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Australia
- A date stamp on every field
Patients who want to begin a medical assessment can start at the FormBlends medical assessment page. Clinicians, journalists, researchers, and industry observers who want access to the research hub can explore the library at the FormBlends peptide library and the FormBlends pipeline tracker.
The 2026 Catalyst Calendar
The report closes with a catalyst calendar that maps the most important likely events in the category through the end of 2026, including:
- ADA 2026 obesity and metabolic presentations
- Expected retatrutide phase 3 readouts
- Orforglipron FDA timing and launch implications
- Survodutide MASH and obesity program milestones
- Amycretin / zenagamtide phase 3 progression
- Additional HHS and FDA signals on peptide evidence review
- State-level enforcement or policy shifts that could affect telehealth GLP-1 access
The point of the calendar is not prediction theater. It is to tell readers which dates and readouts are actually worth caring about if they want to understand where peptide regulation and obesity treatment access are going next.
Regulatory Catalysts on the Peptide Side
The peptide-specific side of the calendar focuses on:
- New nominations to the FDA therapeutic peptide review docket
- Any changes to the 503A bulk-substances framework
- Relevant Federal Register notices
- Budget and oversight signals coming out of HHS
- Litigation and trade-association pressure around compounding access
Where the Report Is More Cautious
The report is especially cautious on:
- Small-cap companies with eye-catching obesity data but weak disclosure
- Compounds with no peer-reviewed human data
- Claims that a new administration automatically means blanket legal access
- Any suggestion that investigational obesity drugs can be obtained legally outside trial settings
Updated analysis on each of these is published monthly on the FormBlends research hub at the FormBlends research hub.
About FormBlends
FormBlends is a telehealth platform focused on medically supervised GLP-1 therapy, peptide education, and evidence-based research on the fast-changing metabolic health landscape. The company publishes guides on peptide legality, FDA policy, obesity-drug pipeline developments, and plain-English summaries of clinical evidence for patients and clinicians.
The company’s research hub is available at the FormBlends website.
Explore the pipeline tracker: https://formblends.com/pipeline
Explore the research hub: https://formblends.com/research
Visit FormBlends: https://formblends.com
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
From a Calling to International Recognition: ENKU Brings Japanese Calligraphy to Global Audiences
Japan, 19th Jun 2026 — Self-taught Japanese calligraphy artist ENKU is developing a contemporary body of work that combines traditional calligraphy, performance, installation art, and cultural storytelling.
Beginning his calligraphy journey in 2024 without formal training, ENKU draws inspiration from language, Japanese cultural traditions, history, and the relationship between written characters and human experience.
Through exhibitions, live performances, and collaborative projects, ENKU explores how calligraphy can be experienced not only as writing, but also as visual art, movement, sound, light, and reflection.
Latest Publicly Released Work

Exhibited in Shibuya, Tokyo, in November 2025, ENKU’s latest publicly presented work explores themes of meaning, purpose, reflection, focus, direction, and character through a composition inspired by traditional Japanese and Buddhist visual concepts. The work is structured around two symbolic worlds: one connected to spirit, wisdom, and clarity, and the other connected to life, light, and origin.
The composition brings together four interconnected concepts related to purpose, focus, direction, and character. Created using gold and silver foil, the appearance of the work changes depending on the viewer’s position and angle. ENKU created the piece with the intention of encouraging reflection, calm, and contemplation.
Koto and Calligraphy Collaboration Performance

In June 2025, ENKU presented a collaborative performance combining Japanese koto and live calligraphy. For the performance, he created a custom gold folding screen and incorporated two central themes: the miracle of life and the flow of time.
Using glow-in-the-dark materials, ENKU transformed the performance space into an immersive visual experience, expressing these ideas through lines and points of light emerging from darkness. The work invited audiences to experience changing perspectives through the folding screen structure, light, and movement.
The Story Behind the Artist
ENKU traces the beginning of his calligraphy journey to a deeply personal experience in late 2023, which inspired him to begin studying calligraphy independently in March 2024 despite having no formal training or prior experience beyond elementary school handwriting classes.
Originally drawn to language, Japanese culture, tradition, and history, ENKU’s work explores the origins and meanings of words, the beauty of written forms, and the cultural idea that words can carry influence beyond their literal definitions.
From First Exhibition Challenge to Ongoing Practice
Shortly after beginning calligraphy, ENKU decided to pursue international opportunities and applied for a New York exhibition after discovering an open call through social media. Once accepted, he faced the challenge of creating an exhibition-ready artwork despite never having made one before.
As the deadline approached, he struggled to create a work he felt satisfied with. A single phrase, translated as “Divine Wind,” came to mind, and the piece inspired by that phrase became his first exhibited work. ENKU describes this as his first major wall as an artist.
Why Calligraphy Matters in the Age of AI
ENKU believes contemporary calligraphy offers a physical, time-intensive, and human experience in an increasingly digital age. He sees the act of creating and encountering calligraphy as something that can refine people’s sensibilities and give viewers a direct experience of being alive.
At a time when AI is becoming increasingly present, ENKU’s work emphasizes hand-made expression, material presence, physical effort, and the emotional impact of written form.
Future Vision
Through calligraphy, ENKU aims to become an artist active not only in Japan but around the world. One of his long-term goals is to create a work valued at 100 million yen.
Japanese Taiko Drums, Koto, and Calligraphy Collaboration Performance

In November 2024, ENKU presented an early collaborative performance combining Japanese taiko drums, koto, and calligraphy. The performance explored the relationship between sound, language, meaning, and written expression through layered calligraphic forms.
This performance marked one of ENKU’s first attempts to expand calligraphy beyond the page and into a live, multi-sensory format.
About ENKU
ENKU is a self-taught Japanese calligraphy artist based in Tokyo. Beginning his calligraphy practice in 2024, he combines traditional Japanese calligraphy with contemporary performance, installation, light-based expression, and themes rooted in language, culture, history, and human experience.
Media Contact:
ENKU | Contemporary Calligraphy Artist
Email: enku.u.sky@gmail.com
Phone: +81 80 4189 3903
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LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/enku11011
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Organization: Contemporary calligraphy artist ENKU
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About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
First Hyperliquid Holders Secure Assets Against the Quantum Threat as qVAULT Launches
qLABS launches qVAULT, secured with Falcon post-quantum cryptography, bringing quantum-resistant protection to institutional and DeFi digital asset holders.
Panama, 19th Jun 2026 – qLABS, a quantum-native Web3 foundation, today launched qVAULT, the first quantum-safe vault for digital assets for everyone. qVAULT is the first live product to let Hyperliquid holders keep HYPE, Hyperliquid’s native digital asset, in post-quantum self-custody, and the launch puts post-quantum protection, long confined to research papers and conference slides, into a product holders run themselves. The first HYPE on HyperEVM has already moved into qVAULT post-quantum vaults during early access.

qVAULT is a post-quantum, self-custody smart-contract vault for crypto that lets holders move assets out of elliptic-curve-only control and into vaults that sign with Falcon (FN-DSA), the signature scheme the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) selected for standardization.
The quantum threat is concrete and present. The major public chains, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Hyperliquid through HyperEVM, secure funds with elliptic-curve signatures. HyperEVM authenticates with ECDSA over the secp256k1 curve, the same scheme Ethereum uses. A sufficiently capable quantum computer will break that cryptography and expose any address whose public key has appeared on chain. Because a public key revealed on chain today can be harvested and broken once that hardware exists, “harvest now, decrypt later” makes this a liability holders carry today, not a problem for a later decade.
qVAULT quantum-safe smart contract vault signs with Falcon (FN-DSA), the scheme NIST selected for standardization and currently in public review as FIPS 206. Since qVAULT is a non-custodial solution, qLABS never holds keys or seed phrases. The path into the vault has three steps: connect a self-custody account such as MetaMask, create a Falcon-secured vault, and bring assets across, out of ECDSA-only control and under a post-quantum signature.
qLABS is not making the case alone. A growing group of institutional and DeFi participants is working with the foundation on what post-quantum security means for their corner of the market. Two of them are public companies: HYLQ Strategy Corp (CSE: HYLQ), the first corporate treasury to hold HYPE, is evaluating quantum-safe custody for its position, and DigitalX (ASX: DCC), an institutional digital asset manager, recently took part in a quantum-preparedness workshop run by qLABS and 01 Quantum. On the DeFi side, the bonding protocol ApeBond is assessing post-quantum protection for its markets.
qVAULT’s design and threat model are public in a published litepaper, and its code has passed an independent security audit by Fairyproof. The cryptography itself is overseen by people who help set the standard: qLABS’ advisory board includes Dr. Edoardo Persichetti, co-author of HQC, an algorithm NIST selected for post-quantum standardization, and Aaron Moore, former CTO of QuSecure with a background at the NSA and DARPA.
Hyperliquid has become the center of gravity for on-chain trading: more than 3.5 trillion USD in cumulative volume, over 9 billion USD in open interest, and roughly 70 percent of open interest across all on-chain perpetuals exchanges, more than every competitor combined. Yet while Ethereum, Solana, and BNB Chain have all published quantum-resistance roadmaps, research, or live test results, Hyperliquid has not yet published a comparable plan. Until it does, protection in its ecosystem sits exactly where qVAULT puts it: in the hands of the holder. qONE, the qLABS native token powering qVAULT, has traded on Hyperliquid since February 2026.
“For years, post-quantum security lived in standards drafts and conference talks, with nowhere to put real money,” said Andrew Cheung, CTO of qLABS and President and CEO of 01 Quantum Inc. (TSXV: ONE; OTCQB: OONEF), a strategic partner of qLABS. “qVAULT closes that gap: a place holders move real assets onto Falcon signatures today, keep their own keys, and do it inside a live, audited smart-contract environment. That combination turns harvest-now-decrypt-later from a warning into something you can act on before the Q-Day arrives.”
“Hyperliquid is the best thing to happen to finance in years, real markets, real size, fully on-chain,” said Antanas Guoga (Tony G), President of qLABS. “The institutions and protocols that move first on post-quantum security are the ones prepared when the threat stops being theoretical. Protecting the best of on-chain finance is exactly where that starts.”
About qVAULT
qVAULT is a post-quantum, self-custody smart-contract vault for crypto. It signs with Falcon (FN-DSA), the signature scheme NIST selected for standardization and currently in public review as FIPS 206, letting holders move assets out of ECDSA-only control while retaining full custody. qLABS never holds keys or seed phrases.
Learn more: qvault.xyz
About qLABS
qLABS is a quantum-native Web3 foundation building post-quantum security for digital assets, with qVAULT as its flagship product and qONE as its native token. Its advisory board includes Dr. Edoardo Persichetti, co-author of the NIST-selected HQC algorithm, and Aaron Moore, former CTO of QuSecure. 01 Quantum Inc. (TSXV: ONE; OTCQB: OONEF) is a strategic technological partner of qLABS.
For more details contact: gintautas@qlabs.tech
Media Contact
Organization: qLABS
Contact Person: Ada Jonuse
Website: https://qlabs.tech/
Email: Send Email
Country:Panama
Release id:46266
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Press Release
Tradesman Nutrition Reviews Highlight Strong Demand for Supplements Built for Blue Collar Workers Across the United States
San Francisco, CA, Jun 19, 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Tradesman Nutrition is gaining growing attention across the supplement industry. Thousands of American blue-collar workers are turning to the brand for practical nutrition solutions designed around demanding physical jobs. The company is receiving a steady stream of positive customer feedback. Many reviews highlight improvements in energy, weight management, recovery, and overall daily performance.

Unlike traditional supplement brands that mainly target athletes or gym-focused consumers, Tradesman Nutrition takes a different approach. It focuses on the needs of everyday working men. The company designs its products for people working long hours in construction, electrical work, plumbing, carpentry, mechanical trades, and other physically demanding industries. These jobs require sustained energy and strong recovery.
The company explains its mission in simple terms. It aims to help working men improve fitness and energy levels. It also focuses on helping them perform at a higher standard without forcing major lifestyle changes. Customers are not asked to completely change their routines. Instead, the products are designed to fit into existing work schedules and habits.
This approach is resonating strongly with customers. Thousands of reviews across the product range reflect this response. Many users describe clear and practical benefits that relate directly to their daily work lives.
One customer, Merv A, a 60-year-old painter, shared a simple but powerful transformation. He said, “Haven’t worn my old work shirt in years, fits again now.”
Weight management and physical improvement appear often in customer feedback. Another reviewer, Shane S, a 41-year-old carpenter, reported noticeable changes while using the company’s Shred product. He said, “Been on the Shred for a few weeks and love it. Feels like it’s shredding fat while keeping me moving all day.”
Affordability and practicality are also important drivers of customer satisfaction. James C, a 21-year-old apprentice electrician, explained the financial benefit compared to his daily spending habits. He said, “As an apprentice, I was sick of paying 7 dollars a day at the servo, so happy I found something way cheaper and it works way better.”
These testimonials reflect a broader pattern across the customer base. Many tradesmen are looking for simple ways to improve health without adding complexity to their already demanding schedules. Reviewers often mention that the products fit easily into their daily routines. This includes use on job sites, during travel, and in early morning starts.
A major theme in Tradesman Nutrition Reviews is sustained energy throughout long workdays. Customers frequently report improved endurance. They also describe reduced fatigue and better focus during long shifts. For workers who start early and finish late, steady energy is important for both productivity and safety.
Weight management is another commonly reported benefit. Many customers who use Shred and related products report visible changes in body composition. They report these results while continuing physically intense labor. Unlike structured fitness programs that require gym time and strict dieting, users say the products integrate naturally into their work routines.
Recovery and rest also appear often in customer feedback. Many tradesmen report improved sleep quality and faster recovery after demanding workdays. Given the physical strain of blue-collar work, this benefit has become a key factor in customer satisfaction.
The company reports serving more than 100,000 American blue-collar workers. It also maintains a 4.9-star average rating among its customers. Thousands of reviews across multiple products continue to reinforce its market position. These products include Energy Drink, Sleep formula, Shred, T Fuel, and Creatine. The feedback supports its identity as a brand created for working men rather than general fitness consumers.
Another consistent theme in reviews is accessibility. Many customers say they had never considered supplements before discovering Tradesman Nutrition. The brand’s focused messaging has introduced nutrition support to a new audience. These are men who view nutrition as a practical tool for work performance rather than a fitness luxury.
As the company continues to expand across the United States, customer testimonials suggest strong alignment between product design and real-world needs. The focus on simplicity, affordability, and work-driven performance has helped it stand out in a crowded supplement market.
With thousands of positive reviews and growing recognition among American tradesmen, Tradesman Nutrition shows that supplements designed for physically demanding jobs can meet a long-overlooked need in the wellness industry. For many customers, the message is clear. When products are built for the realities of hard work, the results become visible in everyday life. To learn more, visit: https://tradesmannutrition.com/ .
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Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
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