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Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer: ADT – Complete Guide (2026)

Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer: Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT)

📅 Medically reviewed: April 19, 2026 | ⏱️ 8 min read | 🏥 Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad | 🩺 Urology

What is hormone therapy for prostate cancer?

Hormone therapy (also called androgen deprivation therapy – ADT) is a treatment that lowers testosterone levels in the body. Prostate cancer cells need testosterone to grow. By reducing testosterone, ADT slows cancer growth and can shrink tumors.

ADT is NOT a cure for prostate cancer. It controls the disease, often for years, but cancer eventually becomes resistant (castration-resistant prostate cancer – CRPC).

📌 Key fact: Testosterone is the fuel for prostate cancer. ADT starves cancer cells by reducing testosterone to castrate levels (<50 ng/dL).

How does ADT work?

ADT works by interrupting the androgen receptor signaling pathway:

  • Testosterone is produced primarily in the testes (95%) and adrenal glands (5%)
  • Testosterone is converted to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in the prostate
  • DHT binds to androgen receptors on prostate cancer cells, stimulating growth
  • ADT reduces testosterone production or blocks androgen receptors
Goal: Reduce testosterone to <50 ng/dL (castrate level). This slows cancer progression and can shrink metastases.

Types of ADT – LHRH agonists, antagonists, anti-androgens, orchiectomy

LHRH agonists (most common):

  • Mechanism: Overstimulate the pituitary gland, causing a surge then suppression of testosterone
  • Examples: Leuprolide (Lupron), goserelin (Zoladex), triptorelin (Trelstar)
  • Administration: Injection (1, 3, 4, or 6-month formulations)
  • Testosterone flare: Initial testosterone surge (2-3 weeks) – can cause pain flare in bone metastases. Prevent with anti-androgen.

LHRH antagonists:

  • Mechanism: Block LHRH receptors directly – no testosterone flare
  • Examples: Degarelix (Firmagon), relugolix (Orgovyx – oral)
  • Advantages: No flare, rapid testosterone suppression (days vs. weeks)
  • Disadvantages: More injection site reactions

Anti-androgens:

  • Mechanism: Block androgen receptors (do not lower testosterone)
  • Examples: Bicalutamide, flutamide, nilutamide
  • Use: Combined with LHRH agonist (combined androgen blockade) or alone (less common)
  • Side effects: Liver toxicity, gynecomastia, diarrhea

Orchiectomy (surgical castration):

  • Procedure: Surgical removal of the testicles
  • Advantages: One-time procedure, permanent, no medication side effects
  • Disadvantages: Permanent, psychological impact, irreversible
  • Use: Rarely used today (most men prefer medical ADT)
📌 Note: LHRH agonists are the most commonly used form of ADT. LHRH antagonists are preferred when rapid testosterone suppression is needed or flare is dangerous (spinal cord compression).

When is ADT used?

ADT is used in several clinical scenarios:

  • Metastatic prostate cancer (Stage IV): Primary treatment for hormone-sensitive metastatic disease
  • High-risk localized cancer: Combined with radiation therapy (neoadjuvant, concurrent, and adjuvant ADT)
  • Biochemical recurrence after surgery or radiation: For rising PSA without metastases
  • Palliative treatment: For symptomatic metastases (bone pain, ureteral obstruction)

Duration of ADT by risk group (with radiation):

  • Low-risk: ADT not indicated (unless very large prostate)
  • Favorable intermediate-risk: 4-6 months
  • Unfavorable intermediate-risk: 4-6 months (or 18-24 months for some)
  • High-risk: 18-36 months (2-3 years)
  • Very high-risk: 2-3 years +
Takeaway: ADT is not used for low-risk localized prostate cancer (active surveillance or local treatment alone).

Side effects – hot flashes, fatigue, ED, osteoporosis, metabolic syndrome

ADT has significant side effects due to low testosterone:

Common side effects (50-80%):

  • Hot flashes: Most common – sudden warmth, sweating, flushing
  • Fatigue: Decreased energy, lack of motivation
  • Erectile dysfunction (ED): Loss of libido, difficulty with erections
  • Loss of muscle mass: Sarcopenia
  • Weight gain (especially abdominal fat): Increased fat mass

Serious long-term side effects (10-30%):

  • Osteoporosis: Bone density loss → increased fracture risk (2-3x)
  • Metabolic syndrome: Insulin resistance, diabetes, hyperlipidemia
  • Cardiovascular disease: Increased risk of heart attack and stroke (especially in older men)
  • Anemia: Low red blood cell count
  • Depression and cognitive changes: Mood swings, memory issues

Other side effects:

  • Gynecomastia (breast enlargement/tenderness): More common with anti-androgens
  • Joint pain (arthralgias): 20-30%
⚠️ Important: ADT side effects are cumulative – longer duration increases risk. Discuss baseline bone density, cardiovascular risk, and metabolic health before starting ADT.

Managing side effects – lifestyle, medications, supplements

Hot flashes:

  • SSRI/SNRI antidepressants (venlafaxine, paroxetine, sertraline)
  • Gabapentin
  • Megestrol acetate (caution: weight gain)
  • Avoid triggers (caffeine, alcohol, spicy foods)

Osteoporosis prevention:

  • Calcium: 1,200 mg/day (diet + supplement)
  • Vitamin D: 1,000-2,000 IU/day
  • Weight-bearing exercise: Walking, resistance training
  • Bone density scan (DEXA): Baseline before ADT, repeat every 1-2 years
  • Bisphosphonates (zoledronic acid) or denosumab: For osteoporosis

Fatigue and muscle loss:

  • Regular exercise: Aerobic + resistance training (most effective)
  • Optimize sleep: 7-8 hours/night
  • Treat anaemia: Check CBC; iron supplementation if needed

Cardiovascular risk reduction:

  • Monitor blood pressure, lipids, glucose
  • Statins for elevated cholesterol
  • Metformin for diabetes
  • Lifestyle: Heart-healthy diet, exercise, smoking cessation

Erectile dysfunction:

  • PDE-5 inhibitors (Viagra, Cialis) – less effective on ADT, but can help
  • Penile rehabilitation (vacuum device, injections)
📌 Takeaway: Proactive management of ADT side effects improves quality of life and reduces long-term complications.

Intermittent vs. continuous ADT

Intermittent ADT involves stopping ADT when PSA reaches a low level (nadir) and restarting when PSA rises. It aims to reduce side effects and improve quality of life.

Evidence:

  • Multiple large trials (SWOG 9346, PR-7) show intermittent ADT is non-inferior to continuous ADT for overall survival
  • Intermittent ADT improves quality of life (fewer hot flashes, better sexual function)
  • Not appropriate for men with aggressive or metastatic disease

Who qualifies:

  • Biochemical recurrence after local treatment
  • Low-volume metastatic disease (select patients)
  • Good response to initial ADT (PSA nadir <4 ng/mL after 6-9 months)
Recommendation: Intermittent ADT should be offered to eligible patients to reduce side effects without compromising cancer control.

ADT and radiation – neoadjuvant, concurrent, adjuvant

ADT is often combined with radiation therapy for intermediate and high-risk prostate cancer:

  • Neoadjuvant ADT (before radiation): Shrinks the prostate, reduces treatment volume, improves outcomes. Duration: 2-6 months.
  • Concurrent ADT (during radiation): Sensitizes cancer cells to radiation.
  • Adjuvant ADT (after radiation): For high-risk cancer, continues for 18-36 months.

Evidence:

  • RTOG 86-10 (1990s): ADT + radiation improves survival for high-risk cancer
  • RTOG 92-02: Long-term ADT (28 months) better than short-term (4 months) for high-risk
  • DART 01/05: 6 months ADT + radiation superior to radiation alone for intermediate-risk
📌 Note: For low-risk cancer, ADT is NOT needed with radiation (no benefit, only side effects).

Interactive FAQ – Hormone therapy for prostate cancer

Does hormone therapy cure prostate cancer?

No – ADT controls cancer but does not cure it. Cancer eventually becomes resistant (castration-resistant prostate cancer – CRPC).

What are the side effects of hormone therapy?

Hot flashes, fatigue, ED, loss of libido, osteoporosis, weight gain, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular risk.

How long does hormone therapy work?

2-3 years on average before cancer becomes resistant. Some men respond for 5-10 years.

What is the difference between LHRH agonist and antagonist?

Agonists cause initial testosterone flare (2-3 weeks) then suppression. Antagonists have no flare and suppress testosterone faster.

Can I take hormone therapy pills?

Relugolix (Orgovyx) is an oral LHRH antagonist. Most ADT is given as injections (1-6 months).

Does hormone therapy cause permanent side effects?

Some side effects improve after stopping ADT (hot flashes, fatigue, libido). Osteoporosis and metabolic changes may persist.

What is intermittent ADT?

ADT is stopped when PSA is low, then restarted when PSA rises. Reduces side effects without compromising survival.

Do I need ADT with radiation?

For low-risk: no. For intermediate/high-risk: yes – ADT improves radiation outcomes.

Can I prevent osteoporosis from ADT?

Yes – calcium, vitamin D, weight-bearing exercise, and bisphosphonates or denosumab for high-risk patients.

🩺
Dr. Surya Prakash B
MS, MCh (Urology) | Consultant Urologist
Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet, Hyderabad
Medical reviewer for 247healthcare.blog | Review date: April 19, 2026

Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Hormone therapy has significant side effects. Discuss with a medical oncologist or urologist at Vivekananda Hospital.

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