All Thymosin Alpha-1 Certificate of Analysis results— 448 COAs
TitrateLab · Certificate of Analysis

Thymosin Alpha-1 — Cryocore PerformanceCertificate of Analysis · Independent third-party lab result

Endotoxin resultPass Sterility / endotoxin assay within limits
Dose vs label 5mg Label 5mg
Evidence Source archived
Test date
2026-05-19
Testing lab
Freedom Diagnostics
Batch / lot
Black Cap
Quantity
5mg
label 5mg
Endotoxins
Pass
Assay method
Endotoxin testing performed using Limulus Amebocyte Lysate assay in accordance with USP <85> under validated laboratory conditions.
Label dose
5mg
Context

How this result compares

We have catalogued 483 Thymosin Alpha-1 certificates; across the 448 with a purity result the median tested purity is 99.65%.

Tested 2026-05-19 by Freedom Diagnostics via Endotoxin testing performed using Limulus Amebocyte Lysate assay in accordance with USP <85> under validated laboratory conditions.. This test is newer than 79% of our catalogued Thymosin Alpha-1 certificates.

Cryocore Performance has 15 certificates in our corpus, including 2 for Thymosin Alpha-1 at a median tested purity of 99.67%.

Manufacturer
Cryocore Performance
View vendor profile
Source

Freedom Diagnostic

Source archived

We archived this certificate's source document — an immutable, SHA-256-fingerprinted copy held by TitrateLab (see Saved source document below). It stays verifiable even if the upstream page disappears.

Method
Endotoxin testing performed using Limulus Amebocyte Lysate assay in accordance with USP <85> under validated laboratory conditions.
Test type
freedom_composite
Dose
5mg
Catalogued
2026-07-04
Saved source

Saved source document

sha256:4672f30390356441… — immutable copy held by TitrateLab

Download the saved PDF (sha256 4672f3039035…)
Related

Other Thymosin Alpha-1 certificates

All Thymosin Alpha-1 results & stats
This certificate is part of TitrateLab's community-trust corpus. See more from Cryocore Performance or learn how trust scores are computed on the methodology page. New to lab reports? How to read a COA →