If you’ve started researching hormone therapy, you’ve probably already noticed something: the information out there is loud, confusing, and often contradictory. One source tells you bioidentical is the only safe option. Another tells you it’s all the same chemistry. So which is it?
I’m Kelli — the nurse practitioner behind ÉLEVÉ Regenerative Aesthetics & Wellbeing in Lenexa. I’m BIOTE-certified in pellet therapy and I work with patients every week who are trying to make sense of this exact question. Here’s what I actually tell them.
Bioidentical hormones are compounds with a molecular structure identical to the hormones your body already makes — estrogen, progesterone, testosterone. They’re typically derived from plant sources like soy or yam and processed in a compounding pharmacy to match human hormone structure exactly.
Synthetic hormones — like the ones found in some traditional hormone replacement medications — are intentionally altered. The structural changes serve a purpose: they make the compound stable, dosable, and in many cases patentable. They’re FDA-approved and have decades of clinical data behind them.
Here’s where I want to be honest with you: the “bioidentical = safe, synthetic = dangerous” framing you’ll see on a lot of websites is oversimplified. Both categories have appropriate clinical uses. The right choice depends on you — your labs, your symptoms, your history, your goals.
What I will say is this: in my practice, I lean toward bioidentical pellet therapy because I see consistent results with it and because the delivery method (a small pellet placed under the skin every 3–5 months) removes the daily compliance burden that trips up so many patients on creams or pills.
This is the part most articles skip, so let me walk you through exactly what to expect when you work with me.
1. Initial consultation and lab order. We start with a full conversation about your symptoms, your health history, and your goals — then I order labs. I run a comprehensive panel tailored to you, and depending on your history I may add additional labs to get a complete picture.
2. Lab results. Results take a few days to come back.
4.
Pellet insertion. The procedure itself takes 20–30 minutes. Multiple small pellets are placed just under the skin using local numbing only. Men typically receive significantly more pellets than women based on dosing needs. You walk out the same day.
5.Peak labs. We draw follow-up labs at the peak of your hormone levels — 4 weeks after insertion for men, 6 weeks for women.
6. Trough labs. A second lab draw at 14 weeks captures your hormone levels at their lowest point. Peak and trough labs together tell me exactly how your body is metabolizing the pellets, which lets me fine-tune your dose at the next insertion.
7. Ongoing care. At every visit, I review your health history and current symptoms with you. This is the part most clinics skip — and it’s the reason my patients stay optimized. Dosing isn’t “set it and forget it.” Your body changes. Your dose should too.
I’m BIOTE-certified in pellet therapy, which means I trained directly in the protocols that pioneered modern hormone pellet medicine. I follow those clinical guidelines for dosing, lab interpretation, and timing.
I source my pellets from a trusted compounding pharmacy partner.
You don’t need to be in menopause to have a hormone problem. Decline can start in your late 30s, and the symptoms are often dismissed as “just getting older” or “stress.”
Things I hear most often from patients before they start therapy:
If three or more of these sound familiar, it’s worth a conversation. It might be hormones. It might be something else. Labs tell us which.
Weight loss can be a real struggle when your hormones aren’t optimized. Eating clean and working out hard might not move the needle if your underlying chemistry is fighting you. When testosterone and other key hormones drop, your metabolism slows, your body holds onto belly fat more aggressively, and insulin sensitivity takes a hit.
I run medical weight loss programs alongside hormone therapy at ÉLEVÉ because, in many of my patients, addressing both is what finally makes things click.
Internal decline shows up externally faster than most people realize. Estrogen and testosterone both play roles in collagen production, skin elasticity, and facial fat distribution. When those levels drop, you see it — thinner skin, more visible lines, loss of facial volume.
This is why I treat aesthetics and wellness as one program at ÉLEVÉ, not two separate buckets. Many of my hormone patients also pair their therapy with injectable filler, biostimulators, or NOUVADerm laser to address the visible side of aging at the same time we’re correcting the chemistry underneath.
This isn’t a prescription. It isn’t a diagnosis. It isn’t a sales pitch for one type of therapy over another. Hormone replacement — bioidentical, synthetic, pellet, cream, oral, or otherwise — requires individualized evaluation by a licensed provider. What works beautifully for one patient may not be right for another. Lab work, medical history, and clinical judgment all matter.
What I can tell you is that if you’re curious whether your symptoms point to a hormone imbalance, the only way to find out is to test. And if you’d like that conversation to happen with a provider who treats you as a whole person — not a checklist — I’d be honored to be that person.
Kelli Rausch, APRN, FNP-BC
BIOTE-Certified Provider · ÉLEVÉ Regenerative Aesthetics & Wellbeing