Skip to main content Skip to main content

Does BPC-157 Really Shrink Your Nose? A Plastic Surgeon Sets the Record Straight

The expert truth behind the TikTok.

Close-up of a woman's face focusing on the nose bridge, relating to non-surgical nose reshaping trends
Unsplash / Tom Rogers

If you have spent any time on beauty TikTok lately, you may have encountered the claim that peptide nasal sprays, specifically those containing BPC-157, can reshape and slim the nose without surgery. The before-and-after videos are convincing and the comment sections are full of believers, but the experts have a pretty clear response to whether or not this aesthetics hack is legit.

“The short answer is no,” says New York plastic surgeon Steven Pearlman, MD, who has logged more than 7,500 rhinoplasties across a 34-year career and served as past president of the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. “There are zero peer-reviewed studies showing BPC-157 can shrink the nose.”

What does exist, he explains, is a single rat study showing the peptide reduced inflammation in nasal mucosa, a distinction that matters. “That is an anti-inflammatory effect on soft tissue, not a structural or cosmetic change,” he stresses.

In other words, the mechanism being celebrated on social media is not the one people think it is. “If someone thinks their nose looks smaller after a peptide protocol, they are most likely seeing reduced nasal congestion or swelling, not a change in the actual shape or cartilage of their nose.”

The viral trend hinges on a fundamental misunderstanding of what peptides can do at a structural level, and Dr. Pearlman is direct about where the science stops. No peptide, he says, can physically reshape the nose. “Cartilage does not respond to peptides that way. The nose is bone and cartilage. Peptides do not remodel either.” For anyone hoping a spray or serum might do what a scalpel can, the old adage holds true: If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.

Beyond the efficacy question, Dr. Pearlman raises concerns about the safety profile of BPC-157 when used specifically around the nose. “Human trial data is extremely limited,” he notes. “And nearly all research comes from a single lab in Croatia.” That is a thin scientific foundation for a trend that influences millions of purchasing decisions.

For patients who want a meaningful change to their nose profile without committing to surgery, Dr. Pearlman acknowledges there is a middle ground via a non-surgical rhinoplasty using injectable filler, which can softly refine shape and improve profile. But even that has limits. “It cannot make a nose smaller or replicate what surgery achieves.”

The results people are chasing on TikTok—a genuinely narrower bridge, a refined tip, a meaningfully different silhouette—remain, in his experience, firmly in the domain of the operating room. “The only way to actually change the shape of your nose is rhinoplasty.” Everything else, however promising it looks in a 15-second clip, is something else entirely.

FIND A DOCTOR

Find a NewBeauty "Top Beauty Doctor" Near you

Filter doctors by location and specialty
NewBeauty Magazine Cover
NEWBEAUTY

Give the Gift of Luxury

GIVE A SUBSCRIPTION