Common Treatments for Advanced Prostate Cancer

Medically Reviewed by Nazia Q Bandukwala, DO on September 08, 2023
4 min read

Doctors can treat, but not cure, advanced prostate cancer. The goal is to slow down the cancer's spread and help you feel better. Most men with it have a high quality of life for many years.

There are different kinds of treatments, including hormone therapy, immunotherapy, radiation, and chemotherapy. Ask your doctor about the risks, benefits, and side effects of each one, and what's best for you.

The goal is to cut the supply of hormones that fuel your prostate cancer. That can slow its growth.

The male sex hormones (called androgens), especially testosterone, can help prostate cancer cells grow inside and outside of the prostate gland. Hormone therapy shuts down this process. It will:

  • Dramatically lower your testosterone levels
  • Prevent prostate cancer cells from using low levels of androgens

Most doctors think it makes sense to start this type of treatment as soon as prostate cancer becomes advanced. Your doctor may call it "androgen deprivation therapy" or ADT.

Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonists both work to suppress testosterone levels produced by the body through different mechanisms.

LHRH agents include treatments like:

GnRH antagonists. These drugs can work quickly to lower testosterone levels. Drugs of this type include:

Sometimes, these drugs can cause your body to temporarily make a lot of testosterone before the levels drop. To avoid side effects from the hormonal surge, your doctor may also suggest you take another kind of drug, called an "anti-androgen."

How you take them. Most GnRH drugs are injections. How often you'll get one varies by treatment, ranging from once a month to once a year. Relugolix (Orgovyx) is a pill that's taken once daily.

Anti-androgens. These drugs block the ability of your prostate cancer cells to use androgens.

Three common ones are:

You may take these before you start GnRH agents to avoid a hormone flare or if another hormone therapy stops working.

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How you take them. Some hormone therapy drugs are pills. Others are injections or pellets that doctors implant under your skin. Your doctor will set your drug schedule based on your particular needs and how your cancer responds.

If you become resistant to hormone therapy or have problems with side effects, your doctor may try "intermittent therapy." This means you'll take the drugs for a while, then stop, then start again. This can improve your quality of life and make the hormone therapy work better.

Newer types of hormone therapy include:

Abiraterone acetate (Zytiga). This pill stops prostate cancer cells (and other cells) from making androgens. It's approved for men with advanced prostate cancer who have tried other hormone therapies.

Apalutamide (Erleada). This pill also blocks cells from receiving androgens. It is approved for men with prostate cancer that has not yet spread to distant parts of the body.

Enzalutamide (Xtandi). It's a pill that blocks cells from receiving androgens. It's approved for men with advanced prostate cancer who have tried other hormone therapies.

Your testicles make most of your testosterone. Surgery to remove the testicles (called an orchiectomy) is a type of hormone therapy because it quickly cuts your testosterone levels.

This operation used to be common, but most men with prostate cancer don't get it any more. Instead, they take medicines that lower hormone levels while leaving the testicles in place.

If you do get the surgery, it's an "outpatient" procedure, which means you won't have to stay in the hospital. Your doctor may also give you anti-androgen therapy.

If hormone therapy stops working, your doctor may suggest immunotherapy. It uses your immune system -- your body's defense against germs -- to attack the cancer cells.

Sipuleucel-T (Provenge) is used to treat advanced prostate cancer. You may hear it called a cancer vaccine. To make it, the doctor removes white blood cells from your blood. These go to a lab, where experts genetically engineer them to fight your prostate cancer. You then get these cancer-killing cells by IV injection in three separate treatments.

This treatment uses high-energy rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. You may get it to make your tumors smaller and ease symptoms.

You get radiation therapy either from a machine at a clinic or through substances doctors put into your body.

If your prostate cancer has spread to your bones but not beyond, your doctor may consider using the drug radium-223 (Xofigo) along with medicine to lower your testosterone level. You get radium-223 by injection once a month. It binds to minerals in your bones to deliver radiation directly to bone tumors.

If other treatments stop working and your cancer grows, your doctor may recommend chemotherapy. When to start chemo depends upon many things, such as:

  • Which types of treatment you already had
  • Whether you need radiation first
  • How well you tolerate chemo
  • Which other options are available to you

There are many types of chemo drugs. You get them by IV or as a pill. They travel throughout your body to destroy cancer cells.

Doctors often combine the chemo drug docetaxel (Taxotere) with prednisone, a steroid, for men with hormone-resistant prostate cancer that has spread.