What is hormone therapy for prostate cancer?

Hormone therapy is a possible treatment for prostate cancer. Sometimes it is also called anti hormone therapy.

This page is about hormone therapy for prostate cancer that has not spread to other parts of the body. This is called early prostate cancer. You might have hormone therapy with radiotherapy Open a glossary item. This aims to cure early prostate cancer.

Prostate cancer that has spread is called metastatic prostate cancer. We have separate information about hormone therapy for metastatic prostate cancer.

What is hormone therapy?

Hormones Open a glossary item are natural substances made in our bodies. They control the growth and activity of normal cells. Testosterone is a male hormone mainly made by the testicles.

Prostate cancer usually depends on testosterone to grow. Hormone therapy blocks or lowers the amount of testosterone in the body.

Hormone therapy on its own doesn't cure prostate cancer. But with other treatments, it can lower the risk of an early prostate cancer coming back.

Hormone therapy is also a treatment for prostate cancer that has spread to other parts of the body. This is metastatic or advanced prostate cancer.

When you might have hormone therapy

You might have hormone therapy with radiotherapy. This aims to cure prostate cancer. This is usually for prostate cancer that:

  • hasn’t spread outside the prostate gland - this is localised prostate cancer 
  • has spread into the tissues around the prostate gland - this is locally advanced prostate cancer 

Doctors in the UK recommend the best treatment, depending on your prognostic group. They may use a system called the Cambridge Prognostic Group (CPG).

Read about the Cambridge Prognostic Groups

Your doctor might recommend you have hormone therapy together with radiotherapy if you have a CPG 2, 3, 4 and 5 prostate cancer. And if your cancer hasn't spread to another part of your body.

You might have hormone therapy before, during and after radiotherapy:

  • Hormone therapy before radiotherapy is also called neo adjuvant therapy.
  • Hormone therapy after radiotherapy is called adjuvant therapy.

Doctors usually recommend that you have the treatment for between 4 months and 3 years. How long you have treatment depends on the risk of your cancer coming back. And how many side effects you get.

Hormone therapy without other treatments

Hormone therapy alone doesn’t cure prostate cancer. Your doctor might recommend hormone treatment alone if:

  • the cancer is too advanced to have treatment with the aim to cure it

  • you can’t have surgery or radiotherapy because of other health problems

  • you don’t want to have radiotherapy or surgery

You usually have hormone therapy for as long as it is working. Or your doctor might suggest you have intermittent hormone therapy. This is when you have breaks from treatment and have blood tests every 3 months to check your PSA Open a glossary item. You restart treatment again if your PSA rises above a certain level. 

Metastatic prostate cancer

Hormone therapy is also a treatment for metastatic prostate cancer. You might have it with chemotherapy Open a glossary item such as docetaxel. You may also have some hormone therapies such as abiraterone with:

  • steroids called prednisolone

  • other types of hormone therapies such as enzalutamide and apalutamide

Hormone therapy if your cancer comes back after treatment

Hormone therapy is a treatment if cancer comes back after radiotherapy or surgery. This is recurrent prostate cancer.

Types of hormone therapy

There are 2 main ways of having hormone therapy. They are: 

  • injections

  • tablets

Injections

The injections work by blocking messages from a gland in the brain. These messages tell the testicles to produce testosterone.

You usually have these injections at your GP surgery.

Luteinising hormone-releasing hormone agonists (LHRH agonists or LH blockers)

A gland in the brain called the pituitary gland Open a glossary item makes the luteinising hormone (LH). This controls the amount of testosterone made by the testicles. LH blockers stop the production of luteinising hormone. So the testicles stop making testosterone.

At first, the injections may make your symptoms worse. This is called tumour flare. Your doctor might recommend you take an anti androgen tablet to stop the tumour flare. For example, bicalutamide. You usually take bicalutamide for the first 4 to 6 weeks of your hormone treatment.

Types of LH blockers include:

  • leuprorelin (Prostap) – you have this every 4 weeks or 12 week

  • goserelin acetate (Zoladex) – you have this every 4 weeks or 12 weeks

  • buserelin (Suprefact) – you have this as an injection 3 times a day for 7 days and then a nasal spray 6 times a day

  • triptorelin (Decapeptyl) – you have this once a month, 3 monthly or 6 monthly

Gonadotrophin-releasing hormone antagonist or GnRH blocker

This is another type of hormone injection. It stops messages from a part of the brain called the hypothalamus that tells the pituitary gland to produce luteinising hormone. Luteinising hormone tells the testicles to produce testosterone. So GnRH blockers stop the testicles making testosterone.   

Your doctor may suggest you have a GnRH blocker called degarelix (Firmagon). You have this every 4 weeks. 

Tablets

Hormone therapy tablets are usually anti-androgen tablets. 

Anti androgen tablets

Prostate cancer cells have areas called receptors Open a glossary item. Testosterone attaches to these receptors. It can encourage cancer cells to divide and grow.

Anti androgen drugs work by attaching themselves to these receptors. This stops testosterone from reaching the prostate cancer cells. Examples of anti androgens for prostate cancer that hasn't spread include:

  • bicalutamide (Casodex) – you take it once a day
  • flutamide (Drogenil) – you take it 3 times a day
  • cyproterone acetate (Cyprostat) – you take 1 to 3 times a day 
  • enzalutamide (Xtandi) – you take it once a day
  • apalutamide (Erleada) – you take it once a day

Other types

Relugolix is a new type of GnRH blocker that stops the testicles making testosterone. Unlike other GnRH blockers, you can take it as a tablet. 

Finding out more about hormone treatment drugs

Check what is the name of the hormone treatment with your doctor or nurse, then take a look at our A to Z list of cancer drugs.

Surgery to remove the testicles (orchidectomy)

Surgery to remove your testicles is a type of hormone therapy for prostate cancer. But it is not a common treatment. You're more likely to have injections or tablets to reduce the level of testosterone in your blood.

The testicles produce testosterone, which can help prostate cancer grow. So removing the testicles can help to control the growth of prostate cancer. After this surgery, the level of testosterone in the blood falls quickly.  

Your doctors might suggest surgery as an option if you don't want to have injections or tablets. 

Checking your hormone therapy is working

You have regular blood tests to check the level of a protein called prostate specific antigen (PSA). PSA is a protein made by both normal and cancerous prostate cells. It is in the blood in small amounts in all men, unless you had surgery to completely remove your prostate gland.

You may have some scans during your treatment. These include scans such as a CT Open a glossary item, MRI Open a glossary item and bone scan Open a glossary item.

While the hormone therapy is working, the level of PSA should stay stable. Or it may go down. But if prostate cancer starts to grow and develop, the level of PSA may go up. This is usually called either:

  • hormone resistant prostate cancer
  • castrate resistant prostate cancer

If this happens, your doctor may need to change your treatment. They will discuss this with you.

Side effects

Side effects of hormone therapy are due to the low levels of testosterone in your body. Many men find that the side effects are often worse at the start of treatment. They usually settle down after a few weeks or months.

Some side effects are common to all hormone therapies for prostate cancer. Others vary from drug to drug. You might not have all of these side effects. Talk to your doctor or nurse about any side effects you have. They can often suggest ways of reducing the side effects and make you feel better. 

The main side effects are:

  • changes to your sex life such as difficulty getting an erection and less desire for sex (low libido)

  • hot flushes and sweating

  • feeling tired and weak

  • breast tenderness and swelling

  • tumour flare

Side effects of long term treatment are:

  • weight gain

  • loss of muscle strength

  • memory problems

  • mood swings and depression

  • bone thinning (osteoporosis)

  • risk of heart problems and diabetes

  • Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology (12th edition)
    VT DeVita, TS Lawrence, SA Rosenberg
    Wolters Kluwer, 2023

  • Prostate cancer: diagnosis and management
    National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), 2019. Last updated December 2021

  • Prostate cancer: ESMO clinical practice guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow up
    C Parker and others
    Annals of Oncology, 2020. Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 1119 - 1134

  • Abiraterone acetate and prednisolone with or without enzalutamide for high-risk non-metastatic prostate cancer: a meta-analysis of primary results from two randomised controlled phase 3 trials of the STAMPEDE platform protocol
    G Attard and others
    The Lancet, 2022. Vol 399, issue 10323. Pages 447-460

  • Electronic Medicines Compendium (eMC)
    Last accessed July, 2025

Last reviewed: 
04 Jul 2025
Next review due: 
04 Jul 2028

Related links