Methylene Blue
Brain fog after chemo is its own battle. Mitochondrial support, cognitive clarity, and emerging research are why survivors keep DM'ing me about this one. Doing my research before I commit.
Learn moreLAUREN × Fierce Health
Breast cancer didn't just take a year of my life — it took a body I recognized. After treatment, the weight came on fast and refused to leave. Tirzepatide is what finally moved the needle for me. This is exactly what I take.
The one that finally worked. Weekly dose, real results, real medical oversight.
ADD TO CART (USE LAUREN10)For my breasties
If you're a survivor — please read this first. Talk to your oncologist before starting any GLP-1. Most survivors are cleared, but every body is different. Fierce Health includes a medical consultation, and your own care team should always be looped in.
On my list
I haven't tried these yet — but they're next on my list. Doing my own research first.
Brain fog after chemo is its own battle. Mitochondrial support, cognitive clarity, and emerging research are why survivors keep DM'ing me about this one. Doing my research before I commit.
Learn more
Survivor circles are talking about this one a lot — I'm digging into the research before I add anything to my routine.
Learn more
Cellular repair, energy, and clearer thinking — three things every survivor I know is chasing post-treatment. Researching this one for myself next.
Learn moreQuestions I get asked
Usually not. Most oncology teams advise waiting until you're done with chemo, radiation, or active treatment before adding a GLP-1. The reason isn't that it's dangerous — we just don't have enough long-term safety data for that combination yet. Always talk to your oncology team first.
This is the question I get asked the most. Current guidance is that GLP-1s may be considered with caution for survivors on stable hormone therapy — which means many of us qualify, but the conversation has to happen with your care team. Fierce Health includes a medical consult with every order, and your oncologist should be looped in too.
Most people notice changes within the first few weeks — appetite goes first, then the scale starts to move. Real, visible body changes usually take 8 to 12 weeks of consistent weekly dosing. Patience is part of the protocol.
The first week or two can bring nausea, fatigue, or some digestive weirdness as your body adjusts. Most of that fades by week three or four. Hydration and small, frequent meals help a lot in the beginning. If anything feels off, message the Fierce Health team — there's always someone to talk to.
Tirzepatide targets two pathways (GLP-1 and GIP), while Semaglutide targets just one. In head-to-head studies, Tirzepatide consistently produces more weight loss — around 20% of body weight compared to 15% for Semaglutide. Both are good options. For me, the bigger result was worth it.
That's between you and your care team. Some people stay on a maintenance dose long-term, others transition to a microdose protocol, and some come off entirely once they've hit their goal. You don't have to decide on day one — just start, listen to your body, and adjust from there.
Surviving was the hardest thing I've ever done. Feeling strong in my body again is the second. If you're a survivor, a fighter, or just a woman tired of feeling stuck — this is for you.
— Lauren @ohheybreastie
Shop with LAUREN10The information shared on this page reflects one person's personal experience and is not medical advice. The featured affiliate is not a licensed healthcare provider. Statements about Fierce Health products have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease — including cancer. Always consult with your licensed healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, medication, or protocol, especially if you are undergoing active treatment, taking other prescriptions, pregnant, or living with a chronic condition. Individual results vary. This page is an affiliate partnership; the featured affiliate may earn a commission on purchases made through links on this page.