Definition

  • Systemic therapy to reduce circulating testosterone to castrate levels (<50 ng/dL) to suppress androgen‐driven prostate cancer growth.
  • Standard backbone for hormone‐sensitive and castration‐resistant prostate cancer (continued in mCRPC).

Rationale

Methods of ADT

Approach Agents / Methods Key Points
Surgical castration Bilateral orchiectomy Immediate testosterone drop; irreversible; no compliance issue.
Medical castration – LHRH agonists Leuprolide, goserelin, triptorelin Initial testosterone flare (↑ symptoms risk: bone pain, spinal cord compression); combine with antiandrogen for 2–4 weeks at start.
Medical castration – LHRH antagonists Degarelix (SC), relugolix (oral) No flare; rapid testosterone suppression.
Antiandrogens (nonsteroidal) Bicalutamide, flutamide, nilutamide Used short‐term to block flare or combined androgen blockade; not for monotherapy long‐term.
Androgen synthesis inhibitors Abiraterone + prednisone Inhibits CYP17 → blocks adrenal/testicular androgen production; requires steroids to prevent mineralocorticoid excess.
 
Administration & Dosing Examples
  • Leuprolide: 7.5 mg IM monthly, 22.5 mg q3mo, 45 mg q6mo.
  • Goserelin: 3.6 mg SC monthly, 10.8 mg q3mo.
  • Degarelix: 240 mg SC loading dose (two injections), then 80 mg monthly.
  • Relugolix: 360 mg PO loading, then 120 mg daily.

Adverse Effects & Monitoring

  • Common: Hot flashes, sexual dysfunction, fatigue, gynecomastia.
  • Metabolic: Weight gain, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia.
  • Skeletal: Osteoporosis, fracture risk.
  • CV risk: Possible ↑ risk of MI, stroke (more with agonists).
  • Others: Mood changes, anemia, muscle loss.

Monitoring:

  • Testosterone, PSA every 3–6 months.
  • Fasting glucose, lipid profile, HbA1c periodically.
  • Bone mineral density (DEXA) every 1–2 years.
  • Monitor for cardiovascular risk factors.

Pharmacist Role

  • Ensure testosterone <50 ng/dL is maintained.
  • Manage flare prevention with antiandrogen lead‐in for LHRH agonists.
  • Counsel on lifestyle measures (exercise, calcium/vitamin D, smoking cessation).
  • Recommend bone‐protective therapy (zoledronic acid or denosumab) if fracture risk high.
  • Screen for and manage metabolic and cardiovascular effects.

Key Takeaway:

ADT is the foundation of prostate cancer management at all stages; method selection depends on urgency of testosterone suppression, patient comorbidities, and preferences. Pharmacists play a critical role in monitoring efficacy, preventing complications, and optimizing supportive care.

Synonyms
ADT
Links