PeptideGrids

Elamipretide

SS-31

Grade A: Approved and proven

TL;DR: Elamipretide (Forzinity, SS-31) received FDA accelerated approval on September 19, 2025, to improve muscle strength in adult and pediatric patients (weighing at least 30 kg) with Barth syndrome, a rare X-linked mitochondrial cardiomyopathy. Accelerated approval was based on improvement in knee extensor muscle strength as an intermediate endpoint reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit, supported by efficacy and safety data from the TAZPOWER randomized crossover trial (n=12 in the blinded phase, with open-label extension). Continued approval is contingent on verification of clinical benefit in a confirmatory trial. For other indications where elamipretide has been studied, including primary mitochondrial myopathy (MMPOWER-3 trial, n=218) and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, Phase 3 trials did not meet their primary endpoints; elamipretide is not approved for these conditions. The evidence base outside the Barth syndrome indication is insufficient to support a Grade A rating for those uses.

Key Takeaways

  • Grade A: Approved and proven
  • FDA approved: FDA accelerated approval (September 19, 2025) for Barth syndrome to improve muscle strength; not approved for primary mitochondrial myopathy, heart failure, or any other indication; confirmatory trial required.
  • Compounding: FDA-approved as Forzinity (subcutaneous injection) for Barth syndrome under accelerated approval as of September 2025. The approval is indication-specific (Barth syndrome, weight ≥30 kg); use for other mitochondrial conditions is not approved. Prior to FDA approval, elamipretide was available only in clinical trials; any compounded SS-31 remains unapproved and lacks FDA quality oversight.
Elamipretide chemical structure
Structure via PubChem CID 11764719

Mechanism

Elamipretide is a mitochondria-targeting tetrapeptide that binds cardiolipin in the inner mitochondrial membrane, stabilizing the electron transport chain and improving mitochondrial bioenergetics.

Evidence

Elamipretide (Forzinity, SS-31) received FDA accelerated approval on September 19, 2025, to improve muscle strength in adult and pediatric patients (weighing at least 30 kg) with Barth syndrome, a rare X-linked mitochondrial cardiomyopathy. Accelerated approval was based on improvement in knee extensor muscle strength as an intermediate endpoint reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit, supported by efficacy and safety data from the TAZPOWER randomized crossover trial (n=12 in the blinded phase, with open-label extension). Continued approval is contingent on verification of clinical benefit in a confirmatory trial. For other indications where elamipretide has been studied, including primary mitochondrial myopathy (MMPOWER-3 trial, n=218) and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, Phase 3 trials did not meet their primary endpoints; elamipretide is not approved for these conditions. The evidence base outside the Barth syndrome indication is insufficient to support a Grade A rating for those uses.

Safety and risks

Injection site reactions are the most common adverse effect documented across clinical trials: they occur frequently, are typically mild to moderate, present as erythema, induration, bruising, pruritus, pain, or urticaria, and generally resolve the day of last administration; they can be managed with oral antihistamines or topical corticosteroids. Hypersensitivity reactions have been reported and patients should be monitored. Because Barth syndrome itself involves cardiomyopathy and skeletal myopathy, distinguishing drug effects from disease progression requires careful follow-up. Long-term safety data beyond the 168-week open-label TAZPOWER extension are limited given the very small patient population. The accelerated approval pathway means the full clinical benefit and risk profile have not been established with the level of evidence required for standard approval; confirmatory trial data are required.

Interactions

No specific drug-drug interactions are characterized in the available label information; given the drug's mitochondrial site of action and the cardiac comorbidities in Barth syndrome patients, concurrent cardiac medications should be managed by a specialist.

Federal compounding status

FDA-approved drug as of 2026-06-02.

An FDA-approved drug that should be obtained as the licensed product. It is not a 503A bulk-substance candidate; compounding from bulk is limited under federal rules and generally permitted only during a declared shortage.

Federal status only, from public FDA records. State pharmacy-board rules vary and are not covered here. This is regulatory reporting, not legal advice. All compounds.

Compounding legality

FDA-approved as Forzinity (subcutaneous injection) for Barth syndrome under accelerated approval as of September 2025. The approval is indication-specific (Barth syndrome, weight ≥30 kg); use for other mitochondrial conditions is not approved. Prior to FDA approval, elamipretide was available only in clinical trials; any compounded SS-31 remains unapproved and lacks FDA quality oversight.

Sources

  1. Efficacy and Safety of Elamipretide in Individuals With Primary Mitochondrial Myopathy: The MMPOWER-3 Randomized Clinical Trial. (2023) rct
  2. Genotype-specific effects of elamipretide in patients with primary mitochondrial myopathy: a post hoc analysis of the MMPOWER-3 trial. (2024) rct
  3. A randomized crossover trial of elamipretide in adults with primary mitochondrial myopathy. (2020) rct
  4. Elamipretide: A Review of Its Structure, Mechanism of Action, and Therapeutic Potential. (2025) review
  5. Targeting mitochondrial dysfunction with elamipretide. (2022) review
  6. Contemporary insights into elamipretide's mitochondrial mechanism of action and therapeutic effects. (2025) review
  7. Randomized dose-escalation trial of elamipretide in adults with primary mitochondrial myopathy. (2018) rct
  8. Phase 2a Clinical Trial of Mitochondrial Protection (Elamipretide) During Stent Revascularization in Patients With Atherosclerotic Renal Artery Stenosis. (2017) rct
  9. A phase 2/3 randomized clinical trial followed by an open-label extension to evaluate the effectiveness of elamipretide in Barth syndrome, a genetic disorder of mitochondrial cardiolipin metabolism. (2021) rct
  10. Long-term efficacy and safety of elamipretide in patients with Barth syndrome: 168-week open-label extension results of TAZPOWER. (2024) rct
  11. Randomized dose-escalation trial of elamipretide in adults with primary mitochondrial myopathy. (2018) other
  12. Randomized dose-escalation trial of elamipretide in adults with primary mitochondrial myopathy. (2018) other
  13. Elamipretide: The first cardiolipin-directed mitochondrial therapeutic for Barth syndrome approved under accelerated approval. (2026) other
  14. In vivo mitochondrial ATP production is improved in older adult skeletal muscle after a single dose of elamipretide in a randomized trial. (2021) rct
  15. Phase 1 Clinical Trial of Elamipretide in Dry Age-Related Macular Degeneration and Noncentral Geographic Atrophy: ReCLAIM NCGA Study. (2022) other
  16. Phase 1 Clinical Trial of Elamipretide in Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration and High-Risk Drusen: ReCLAIM High-Risk Drusen Study. (2022) other
  17. Novel Mitochondria-Targeting Peptide in Heart Failure Treatment: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Elamipretide. (2017) rct
  18. Elamipretide Promotes Mitophagosome Formation and Prevents Its Reduction Induced by Nutrient Excess in INS1 β-cells. (2018) other
  19. Elamipretide treatment during pregnancy ameliorates the progression of polycystic kidney disease in maternal and neonatal mice with PKD1 mutations. (2022) other
  20. Effects of Elamipretide on Left Ventricular Function in Patients With Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction: The PROGRESS-HF Phase 2 Trial. (2020) rct
  21. Use of Elamipretide in patients assigned treatment in the compassionate use program: Case series in pediatric patients with rare orphan diseases. (2023) other
  22. Evaluation of SS-31 as a Potential Strategy for Tendinopathy Treatment: An In Vitro Model. (2022) other

Elamipretide is FDA approved. PeptideGrids presents evidence and regulatory status for informational purposes only. We do not sell, supply, source, or help anyone obtain this compound, and we provide no dosing or administration guidance. This is not medical advice; consult a licensed clinician. Full disclaimer.

Last reviewed June 1, 2026 by PeptideGrids editorial team (independently audited).