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Oxytocin (synthetic): Evidence, Side Effects, and Regulatory Status (2026)

Profile page for Oxytocin (synthetic): Evidence, Side Effects, and Regulatory Status (2026). Evidence grade: moderate.

Statusapproved
EvidenceModerate
Reviewed2026-06-05
Editorial review: Medriva pages are written by named contributors, reviewed by clinical or subject-matter experts, and updated as evidence or regulatory status changes.

Oxytocin (synthetic): Evidence, Side Effects, and Regulatory Status (2026)

Oxytocin (synthetic) is FDA-approved (Pitocin). Evidence grade: moderate. This page is clinically reviewed.

TL;DR / Quick Facts

Oxytocin (synthetic) is Synthetic oxytocin is FDA-approved (Pitocin) for labor induction and postpartum hemorrhage. The intranasal form is widely used off-label and in research for mood, social cognition, and bonding. FDA status: FDA-approved (Pitocin). Typical use cases: womens health, longevity, mood. Evidence grade: moderate. Dosing is per the FDA label — set by your clinician. Common side effects: see below. Medriva editorial stance: follow the FDA label; do not use off-label without clinical supervision.

What it is

Oxytocin (synthetic) is a member of the 9-amino-acid neuropeptide class. Oxytocin is an endogenous neuropeptide produced in the hypothalamus and released from the posterior pituitary. It binds oxytocin receptors in the uterus, breast, brain, and elsewhere.

What the evidence says

Evidence for Oxytocin (synthetic) is moderate. Multiple phase 3 trials and post-market data support the labeled indications.

[Detailed evidence breakdown in the corresponding claim or pillar pages is linked at the bottom of this page.]

What it's used for

Commonly discussed uses of Oxytocin (synthetic):

  • Womens Health — moderate evidence.
  • Additional uses listed in the linked use-case hubs; evidence varies by indication.

For the full list, see the linked use-case hubs below.

Typical dosing

Oxytocin dosing is determined by the approved label, indication, comorbidities, current medications, and clinician judgment. Medriva does not publish individualized dosing instructions or titration schedules. Review the current prescribing information and make changes only with a licensed clinician.

Side effects and risks

  • Common: Side effects vary by compound and indication; review the approved label or profile-specific safety data with a clinician.
  • Serious: Seek urgent care for severe allergic symptoms, chest pain, severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, or other severe reactions.
  • Long-term unknowns: For non-approved or research-use compounds, long-term human safety data may be limited.

Regulatory status

  • FDA-approved use(s): Pitocin (labor induction; postpartum hemorrhage). Intranasal oxytocin is not FDA-approved as a drug but is widely compounded.
  • Compounded availability: see 503A vs 503B explainer
  • Research-use-only (RUO) availability: n/a
  • Banned in sport: see WADA & sports explainer

Cost and access

Oxytocin (synthetic) is available by prescription; see the cost page for the relevant indication. For pricing, see our cost pages or the GLP-1 price/supply tracker where applicable.

Who it might be appropriate for

Adults with a relevant diagnosed condition or clinical goal, under the supervision of a licensed clinician, who have no contraindications. Oxytocin (synthetic) is not for self-experimentation.

Who should not use it

Contraindications vary by compound, indication, pregnancy status, comorbidities, and current medications. For the full list, see the contraindications checklist and discuss with your clinician.

Medriva editorial stance

We describe the literature. We do not promote Oxytocin (synthetic) as a cure, treatment, or performance enhancer. We do not recommend it for self-experimentation. We do recommend that readers (a) understand the evidence grade (moderate), (b) understand the regulatory status (FDA-approved (Pitocin)), and (c) discuss with a licensed clinician before acting.

How to talk to a clinician

See our guide on how to talk to a clinician for a templated conversation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Oxytocin (synthetic) FDA-approved?

FDA-approved (Pitocin). See the regulatory status section above for details.

Does Oxytocin (synthetic) work for womens health?

Evidence is moderate. See the linked use-case hub for the full breakdown.

What are the side effects?

See the side effects section above. Discuss with your clinician.

How much does Oxytocin (synthetic) cost?

See the cost pages or the GLP-1 price/supply tracker where applicable.

Can I buy Oxytocin (synthetic) online?

By prescription only. Medriva does not sell peptides.

Author + Clinical reviewer

Author: Priya Menon, MS Clinical reviewer: Jonathan Reeves, MD Last reviewed: 2026-06-05

Next steps

  • Review the evidence grade and regulatory status before making decisions about Oxytocin.
  • Bring this page to a licensed clinician if you are discussing benefits, risks, or alternatives.
  • Subscribe to the Medriva Peptide Brief for evidence and regulatory updates.

Related use-case hubs

Related comparisons

Editorial process

This page follows the Medriva Editorial Policy and the Clinical Review Methodology. Page last reviewed: 2026-06-05. Author: Priya Menon, MS. Clinical reviewer: Jonathan Reeves, MD.

Current source updates

For new regulator actions, compounding-policy changes, warning letters, shortage updates, and sports-rule changes, review the Peptide Tracker before relying on older summaries.