Certificates of Analysis

Read the certificates currently on file.

7 catalog entries have a published certificate from Titreon Analytical, an independent lab with a quality system aligned to ISO/IEC 17025:2017. The reports below show the specific assays and results listed by the lab. Each certificate is downloadable as a signed PDF. For research use only.

Public COA status for all 15 Aion compounds
CompoundCategoryPurityCOA statusReport
RetatrutideRecomp98.80%Published · COA-2026-9411DetailsPDF
TirzepatideRecomp99.20%Published · COA-2026-9422DetailsPDF
SemaglutideRecomp98.50%Published · COA-2026-9433DetailsPDF
BPC-157Repair98.10%Published · COA-2026-9444DetailsPDF
TB-500RepairNot listedNo published COANot published
MOTS-cRenewalNot listedNo published COANot published
NAD+RenewalNot listedNo published COANot published
EpitalonRenewalNot listedNo published COANot published
GHK-CuRenewalNot listedNo published COANot published
KLOW BlendRenewalNot listedNo published COANot published
CJC-1295 + IpaApex98.65%Published · COA-2026-9455DetailsPDF
TesamorelinApexNot listedNo published COANot published
MT-2Apex98.30%Published · COA-2026-9466DetailsPDF
PT-141ApexNot listedNo published COANot published
BAC WaterSupportNot listedPublished · COA-2026-9477DetailsPDF

Entries marked No published COA do not have a certificate in this public ledger and are not presented as certified. Contact us before ordering if a current certificate is required for your research.

Common questions

How to read the published reports.

Which Aion compounds have a published third-party certificate?

7 catalog entries have a published Certificate of Analysis you can read and download on this page. Entries without a public certificate are marked No published COA and are not presented as certified.

Which lab issued the published certificates?

Titreon Analytical, a third-party analytical lab operating a quality system aligned to ISO/IEC 17025:2017, issues the certificates. Each report is signed by the lab Director and a Quality Assurance reviewer, carries a unique certificate number, and can be authenticated through the lab verification ID printed on the PDF.

How do I read a COA?

Start with purity: the HPLC figure (for example 98.80 percent) against the specification of at least 95.0 percent tells you how clean the peptide is. Then check identity, confirmed by mass spec when the measured mass matches the theoretical mass. The rest of the panel is safety: heavy metals by ICP-MS (should read not detected), sterility (no growth), and bacterial endotoxin (well under the limit). A PASS on every line means the batch met every acceptance criterion.