HealingMaps Take: South Pittsburgh-metro hormone and peptide specialty clinic with a 12-compound peptide menu under an MD medical director. Dr. Lee Moorer, MD leads the clinical team and protocols are tailored to each patient’s goals after consultation.
Castle Rock Hormone Health offers 14 specific peptide compounds (BPC-157, TB-500, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, Sermorelin, Tesamorelin, and 8 more), placing it the deepest disclosed menu of any of the 10+ Pennsylvania peptide clinics in our directory. The clinic is physician-led (MD or DO); about a third of Pennsylvania peptide clinics in our directory are.
✓ Last verified: April 18, 2026 — Edited & verified by Angelica Bottaro for HealingMaps Editorial Staff
| Location | McMurray, Pennsylvania |
| Address | 3906 Washington Rd, McMurray, PA 15317 |
| Phone | (412) 684-4478 |
| Website | crhormonehealth.com |
| Treatments | BPC-157 (injection + capsule), Sermorelin, CJC-1295/Ipamorelin, Ipamorelin, PT-141, Thymosin Beta-4 (TB-500), Tesamorelin, AOD-9604, MOTS-C, IGF-1 LR3, Ibutamoren (MK-677), Semax (nasal spray) |
| Conditions Treated | Recovery, hormone optimization, weight loss, sexual wellness, cognitive support, anti-aging |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection, oral, nasal |
| Cost | N/A |
| Insurance | N/A |
| Clinical Lead | Dr. Lee Moorer, MD — Medical Director & Co-Founder (20+ years experience) |
Castle Rock Hormone Health names Lee Moorer as a clinical lead. To verify their NPI, license number, and specialty, look them up directly at the CMS NPPES Registry or your state’s medical board — both are free public databases.
What this means for you: Knowing your clinician’s NPI and license matters because that’s who’s responsible for your protocol, dose adjustments, and follow-up. Any actively state-licensed physician, NP, or PA can legitimately prescribe compounded peptides — verifying takes about two minutes.
National peptide therapy pricing — based on 487 verified peptide clinics in our directory (April 2026 data). Adjust the calculator below to model your own protocol.
Most Castle Rock Hormone Health patients report the consult-to-first-injection window runs 1–3 weeks depending on lab turnaround and pharmacy fulfillment.
The questions below are pulled from the gaps in this specific listing — areas the clinic doesn’t publicly answer that you should clarify before booking. Each one is designed to get you a useful answer in 30 seconds or less.
Castle Rock Hormone Health operates in McMurray, Pennsylvania and offers peptide therapy. The clinic’s peptide menu includes bpc-157 (injection + capsule), sermorelin, cjc-1295/ipamorelin and related compounds, administered via subcutaneous injection, oral, nasal.
For a closer look at how these compounds work, read our deep dives on how PT-141 is changing sexual health medicine and the CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin growth-hormone peptide stack.
See also the FDA’s 503A bulks list review of BPC-157, Semax, Epitalon and more.If you’re weighing Castle Rock Hormone Health against other Pittsburgh peptide clinics, a couple of things stand out. First, it’s the only clinic in the Pittsburgh area we’ve reviewed that openly discloses its 503A FDA-registered compounding pharmacy sourcing — which matters, because that’s what separates pharmacy-grade compounded peptides from research-grade ones you should stay away from. Second, its published 13-compound peptide menu is the deepest of any Pittsburgh clinic we’ve reviewed.
Before any peptide clinic lands in our directory, we run it through four checks: Is there a named physician or licensed provider we can verify? Does the clinic publish its specific peptide compounds on its own site (not just a vague “peptide therapy” service page)? Is pharmacy sourcing — 503A or 503B, FDA-registered — actually disclosed? And does the clinic have a real brick-and-mortar address we’ve independently confirmed? See our full vetting rubric →
One of the deepest peptide menus in Pennsylvania (12+ compounds), MD medical director, peptide therapy as a named core competency, 5.0-star Google rating, McMurray location serves south Pittsburgh metro (Canonsburg, Mt Lebanon, Bethel Park).
Menu depth warrants careful consultation to match protocol to goals.
Book a consultation online or by phone. Dr. Moorer reviews medical history and labs before starting any peptide protocol.
Explore more BPC-157 and recovery peptide clinics near you.
Based on this listing, Castle Rock Hormone Health names 14 specific peptide compounds: BPC-157, TB-500, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, Sermorelin, Tesamorelin, and 8 more. The clinic may offer additional compounds not published on its public listing — confirm the full menu on a consult call.
HealingMaps editorial wasn’t able to match the named clinical lead to a single NPI in the federal CMS NPPES registry — this can happen when the listing names a generic role (“clinical team”, “supervising physician”) rather than a specific person, or when name variants don’t return an exact match. Ask the clinic to share their physician’s full name and license number on the consult call.
Castle Rock Hormone Health doesn’t mention telehealth or virtual visits on its listing. Most peptide clinics require in-person evaluation for the initial consult; some offer virtual follow-ups once a patient is stable. If geography or travel matters to you, ask on the consult call whether they can prescribe and follow up virtually — and which states they’re licensed to do so in.
Among verified Pennsylvania peptide clinics in the HealingMaps directory, Castle Rock Hormone Health ranks the deepest disclosed peptide menu of any Pennsylvania clinic in the directory. Compound depth is one signal among several — provider credentials, pharmacy sourcing transparency, and lab requirements also matter when comparing.
Castle Rock Hormone Health is located in McMurray, Pennsylvania. The full street address, phone number, and hours are listed in the data card above.
Themes drawn from HealingMaps editorial analysis of verified Pennsylvania peptide clinics in our directory. Refreshed quarterly; percentages rounded to nearest 5%.
Across Pennsylvania peptide clinics in our directory, Sermorelin appears in 55% of listings; BPC-157 in 45%; CJC-1295 in 40%; Ipamorelin in 40%. Compounds appearing in fewer than 20% of Pennsylvania listings — including Tesamorelin, GHK-Cu, TB-500 — are less commonly disclosed; patients seeking those should specifically ask whether the clinic prescribes them.
5% of Pennsylvania clinics in our directory openly state whether they use a 503A or 503B compounding pharmacy. The rest leave the class unstated. The distinction matters for patients — 503A pharmacies fill prescriptions individually after your provider writes them (typically a few-day wait, in-state shipping), while 503B outsourcing facilities pre-batch under direct FDA inspection (often supporting same-visit fulfillment and direct-to-home shipping). Worth asking specifically before you book.
40% of verified Pennsylvania clinics name an MD or DO as clinical lead. The remainder are NP/PA-led or don’t publicly name a specific prescribing clinician. Any state-licensed physician, NP, or PA can legitimately prescribe compounded peptides — but knowing your prescriber’s training and tenure helps you assess fit for your specific protocol.
The median Pennsylvania clinic in our directory publishes 3 specific peptide compounds on its listing. The deepest disclosed menu names 14; 25% of listings name no specific compounds at all. A wide menu means more options at one clinic; a narrow menu can reflect specialization (e.g. weight-loss-only programs) or limited public disclosure (the clinic prescribes more than it advertises).
Pharmacy sourcing: This clinic discloses partnerships with both 503A compounding pharmacies and 503B outsourcing facilities. As a patient, that usually gives you the most flexibility — pre-batched 503B doses for routine in-office or shipped fulfillment, plus 503A custom-compounded prescriptions when your protocol needs individual tailoring.
14 peptide compounds on the menu — BPC-157, TB-500, and CJC-1295 among them at Castle Rock Hormone Health. Two gaps in what’s publicly stated: an individual prescriber name we can verify in CMS NPPES, and which pharmacy class (503A vs 503B) the clinic uses. Reasonable to ask both before booking. See our full vetting rubric →
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