Treatment Overview
Treatment for advanced prostate cancer is based on the stage of the cancer, your Gleason score, and other things, such as your age and overall health. It may include:
- Hormone therapy.
- This uses medicine or surgery to lower the level of androgens in your body. This can slow the growth of prostate cancer and even shrink the tumors. It may also be called androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).
- Radiation therapy.
- This uses high-dose X-rays to destroy cancer cells and shrink tumors. It may be given to treat the cancer or to help relieve symptoms.
- Surgery.
- The doctor may remove the prostate. This is called radical prostatectomy.
- Chemotherapy.
- These medicines kill fast-growing cells, including cancer cells and some normal cells.
Other treatment options may include targeted therapy or immunotherapy. In some cases, a clinical trial may be a good choice.
Your doctor will talk with you about your options and then make a treatment plan.
Treatment for metastatic prostate cancer
Treatment for metastatic prostate cancer is based on many things. These include your age and overall health, the location of the cancer, and whether you had treatment before. Options may include hormone therapy, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. These treatments may be combined. Your doctor may suggest a clinical trial.
Your doctor will talk with you about your options and then make a treatment plan. Some people choose to focus on treating their symptoms instead of the cancer (observation).
Some people use complementary therapies along with medical treatment. Therapies like acupuncture or massage may help you cope with the symptoms and stress of cancer. Talk with your doctor about any of these options you would like to try.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy uses medicine or surgery to lower the level of androgens in your body. This can slow the growth of prostate cancer and even shrink the tumors. It's also called androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).
- If you aren't taking hormone therapy, you'll most likely start. You may take medicines that stop the body from making testosterone. These include LHRH agonists and LHRH antagonists.
- If you're already taking hormone therapy, you may keep taking it. But your doctor may add another hormone therapy. An example is abiraterone.
Medicines
Over time, hormone therapy may no longer keep the cancer from growing. This is called castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Hormone therapy may be continued, but other medicines are added. Examples include:
- Other hormone therapies.
- These include abiraterone, apalutamide, and enzalutamide.
- Chemotherapy.
- These medicines kill fast-growing cells, including cancer cells and some normal cells.
- Targeted therapy.
- These medicines target cancer cells and may cause less harm to normal cells. They help keep cancer from growing or spreading. They include PARP inhibitors, which may be an option for some people with metastatic prostate cancer who have certain gene changes, such as BRCA1 or BRCA2.
- Immunotherapy.
- This treatment helps your immune system fight cancer. One type is a cancer vaccine that's made from your own white blood cells.
Radiation therapy
This uses high-energy X-rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation may be used to treat the cancer or to ease symptoms. It may be used alone or given with hormone therapy.
To treat prostate cancer, radiation is usually given by a machine outside the body. (This is called external radiation.) It may also be given by placing substances inside the body. (This is called internal radiation, or brachytherapy.)
Other treatments
These may include:
- Medicines that contain a radioactive substance.
- An example is radium-223. The medicine is given as a shot (injection). It's absorbed by the affected bone and releases the radiation. It may be used with hormone therapy to treat cancer that has spread to the bones (bone metastases). It also helps relieve pain caused by bone metastases.
- Medicines for bone problems.
- These may help relieve bone pain and prevent bone loss (osteoporosis). Osteoporosis is sometimes caused by long-term hormone therapy.
- Steroids.
- These medicines help control pain and improve appetite. Examples include hydrocortisone and prednisone.
Clinical trials
Clinical trials are an option for many people who have cancer. These research studies test promising new treatments or improvements to existing treatments. People in clinical trials may have access to the latest treatments before they're available to others.
Your medical team can tell you if there's a clinical trial that might be right for you.
Observation
This is a wait-and-see approach to treatment. You have regular visits with your doctor, but the focus is on treating any symptoms that bother you rather than treating the cancer. Some people choose this because it lets them avoid or delay treatments that can have serious side effects.
You can change your mind and start treatment at any time.
Learn more
- Clinical Trials
- Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer (Androgen Deprivation Therapy, or ADT)
- Immunotherapy for Cancer
- Radiation Therapy for Cancer Pain
- Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer
- Radical Prostatectomy