The Consumer’s Guide to Androgen Deprivation Therapy for Advanced Prostate Cancer
I f prostate cancer has spread to other areas of your body, your doctor may recommend androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), which halts the production of androgen hormones, especially testosterone.
“Prostate cancer feeds on testosterone,” explains Bilal Siddiqui, MD, an assistant professor in the department of genitourinary medical oncology at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. “If you remove a man’s testosterone, you’re starving the prostate cancer of its food.”
While ADT doesn’t cure prostate cancer, it can temporarily keep it from spreading or help shrink the tumor. Here’s how the therapy works and whether you may be a candidate for it.
7 Essential Facts About ADT for Advanced Prostate Cancer
1. ADT can be done with surgery or medication.
ADT can be done with surgery (surgical castration) or medication (medical or chemical castration), says Andrew Armstrong, MD, a professor of pharmacology, cancer biology, and urology at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina.
While surgery to remove the testicles (an orchiectomy) is the most cost-effective way to lower testosterone levels, most men opt for medication, because it is reversible, says Dr. Armstrong. ADT includes medications that affect the production of LHRH: LHRH agonists and LHRH antagonists.

2. LHRH agonists and LHRH antagonists work a little differently, but the end result is the same.
One difference between the medications is that LHRH agonists cause an initial surge of testosterone in the body. That can cause you to experience what’s known as a “testosterone flare,” resulting in symptoms such as bone pain and trouble urinating.
Doctors can give LHRH agonists alongside other medications called antiandrogens, such as bicalutamide, that block testosterone activity for a few weeks. “That lets the testosterone surge pass, and it protects our patients from the side effects [of an LHRH agonist],” says Dr. Siddiqui.
LHRH antagonists don’t cause a testosterone flare. Since they shut down testosterone production quickly, they’re a good option for people who may be in the hospital with cancer that is already causing symptoms, says Armstrong.

3. Two LHRH antagonists are approved to treat prostate cancer.
LHRH antagonists include:
- degarelix (Firmagon)
- relugolix (Orgovyx)
Degarelix, which has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) since 2008, is given by injection every 28 days. Relugolix, which was approved in 2020, is taken as a pill once a day.

4. Three LHRH agonists are approved to treat prostate cancer.
LHRH agonists have been approved by the FDA for about 30 years to treat prostate cancer. These include:
- leuprolide (Lupron Depot, Eligard, Camcevi)
- goserelin (Zoladex)
- triptorelin (Trelstar)
LHRH agonists, which are injected or placed as small implants under the skin, are given anywhere from once a month to once every six months. “The main advantage to using the agonists is that they can be given on a less frequent basis,” says Siddiqui.

5. ADT medications are sometimes used alongside other prostate cancer treatments.
In the past, ADT was often the only treatment for prostate cancer, says Siddiqui. But that changed about 15 years ago, when studies started showing that people who used ADT along with other therapies, such as antiandrogens and chemotherapy, experienced less disease progression, he says.
Antiandrogens, as the name suggests, are medications that block androgen hormones, including testosterone, from stimulating the growth of prostate cancer cells. Chemotherapy is another drug treatment that can kill cancer cells.
“In many patients, intensifying their treatment early on seems to lead to improved outcomes,” says Siddiqui.

6. ADT can’t cure prostate cancer, but it can help you live longer.
“ADT is a life-prolonging treatment,” says Siddiqui, “but it’s not curative.” The treatment can temporarily starve the cancer, causing it to recede, but the cancer will eventually return and become resistant to the medication, he says.
When hormone therapy stops working, the cancer is said to be “castration resistant.” On average, it takes about two years for prostate cancer to become resistant to hormone therapy, says Siddiqui. Once men develop metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, the average survival rate is just over two years.

7. ADT can come with side effects.
ADT suppresses testosterone levels, so many people who take an ADT drug experience hormone-related side effects, including fatigue, hot flashes, night sweats, mood swings, muscle loss, and bone thinning, says Siddiqui. “The way I describe it to my patients is, they undergo a form of male menopause,” he says.
Side effects can vary from person to person, including their intensity. “I have some patients who sail right through it and other patients whose symptoms are really intolerable,” says Siddiqui.

Common Questions About ADT for Advanced Prostate Cancer
Should I Try ADT for Advanced Prostate Cancer?

Self-Reflection
Before your next doctor’s appointment, ask yourself these questions.
- What are my goals for the rest of my life?
- What do I hope to gain from this treatment?
- If I choose this treatment, will the side effects bother me?

Doctor Discussion
Here are some questions about ADT to ask your doctor at your next appointment.
- Is ADT a good choice for me?
- Which type of ADT should I try?
- Will I have to take any other treatments in addition to ADT?
- What side effects can I expect, and how can I manage them?
- How often will I have to take an ADT pill or get an injection or implant?
- How can I find financial assistance to pay for the treatment if my insurance won’t cover it?
- How will I be monitored, and how often?
- How long might this treatment work?
- If it doesn’t work, what are the next steps?
- Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer. National Cancer Institute. October 4, 2024.
- Bicalutamide. MedlinePlus. January 15, 2018.
- Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer. American Cancer Society. November 22, 2023.
- Firmagon® (Degarelix for Injection) [PDF]. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. February 2015.
- FDA Approves Relugolix for Advanced Prostate Cancer. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. December 18, 2020.
- Mittal A et al. Triplet Therapy in Metastatic Castrate Sensitive Prostate Cancer (mCSPC)—A Potential New Standard of Care. Current Oncology. April 20, 2023.
- Lupron (Leuprolide Acetate) Depot. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. July 9, 2007.
- How Is Chemotherapy Used to Treat Cancer? American Cancer Society. November 22, 2019.
- Freedland SJ et al. Real-World Treatment Patterns and Overall Survival Among Men With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer (mCRPC) in the US Medicare Population. Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases. June 2024.
- Joyce DD et al. Out-of-Pocket Cost Burden Associated With Contemporary Management of Advanced Prostate Cancer Among Commercially Insured Patients. The Journal of Urology. November 2022.
- Financial Resources. Prostate Cancer Foundation.