Treatment FAQ

what is hormone therapy treatment

by Prof. Kane Kuvalis Published 2 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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What is hormone therapy used for?

Hormone therapy is used to treat cancers that use hormones to grow, such as some prostate and breast cancers. Hormone therapy is a cancer treatment that slows or stops the growth of cancer that uses hormones to grow. Hormone therapy is also called hormonal therapy, hormone treatment, or endocrine therapy.Apr 29, 2015

What are examples of hormone therapy?

Forms of Hormone TherapyNasal spray.Pills or tablets, taken by mouth.Skin gel.Skin patches, applied to the thigh or belly.Vaginal creams or vaginal tablets to help with dryness and pain with sexual intercourse.Vaginal ring.Jan 1, 2020

How is hormone therapy performed?

Hormone therapy can be given in a few ways: Oral medication – Taken by mouth. Injection – Given by an injection under the skin (subcutaneous) or in the muscle (intramuscular). Surgical intervention – Removal of the ovaries in women, or testicles in men, causes lower levels of hormones being made.Apr 7, 2022

What is hormone therapy side effects?

Hormone therapy side effects can include vaginal dryness, discharge, itching, or irritation. It can also cause changes to the menstrual cycle and cause vaginal bleeding that is not related to a period. Hot flashes and night sweats. Hot flashes are very common for people receiving hormone therapy.

How quickly does hormone therapy work?

It may take a few weeks to feel the effects of treatment and there may be some side effects at first. A GP will usually recommend trying treatment for 3 months to see if it helps. If it does not, they may suggest changing your dose, or changing the type of HRT you're taking.

When is hormone therapy recommended?

Women who begin hormone therapy at age 60 or older or more than 10 years from the onset of menopause are at greater risk of the above conditions. But if hormone therapy is started before the age of 60 or within 10 years of menopause, the benefits appear to outweigh the risks. Type of hormone therapy.Jun 9, 2020

Is hormone therapy worse than chemotherapy?

Contrary to the commonly held view, 2 years after diagnosis, hormone therapy, a highly effective breast cancer treatment worsens quality of life to a greater extent and for a longer time, especially in menopausal patients. The deleterious effects of chemotherapy are more transient.Oct 9, 2019

What does hormone therapy feel like?

The transition is often similar to puberty and feels like a roller coaster. You may feel like you are experiencing more feelings or emotions and even developing different pastimes, tastes, interests, and behavior in relationships.Sep 18, 2019

How long can you live on hormone therapy?

On average, hormone therapy can stop the advance of cancer for two to three years. However, it varies from case to case. Some men do well on hormone therapy for much longer.

Is weight gain a side effect of hormone therapy?

Many women believe that taking HRT will make them put on weight, but there's no evidence to support this claim. You may gain some weight during the menopause, but this often happens regardless of whether you take HRT. Exercising regularly and eating a healthy diet should help you to lose any unwanted weight.

What Are The Benefits of Hormone Therapy?

The benefits of hormone therapy depend, in part, on whether you take systemic hormone therapy or low-dose vaginal preparations of estrogen. 1. Syst...

What Are The Risks of Hormone Therapy?

In the largest clinical trial to date, a combination estrogen-progestin pill (Prempro) increased the risk of certain serious conditions, including:...

Who Should Consider Hormone Therapy?

Despite its health risks, systemic estrogen is still the most effective treatment for menopausal symptoms. The benefits of hormone therapy may outw...

Who Should Avoid Hormone Therapy?

Women who have or previously had breast cancer, ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer, blood clots in the legs or lungs, stroke, liver disease, or une...

If You Take Hormone Therapy, How Can You Reduce Risk?

Talk to your doctor about these strategies: 1. Find the best product and delivery method for you. You can take estrogen in the form of a pill, patc...

What Can You Do If You Can't Take Hormone Therapy?

You may be able to manage menopausal hot flashes with healthy-lifestyle approaches, such as keeping cool, limiting caffeinated beverages and alcoho...

The Bottom Line: Hormone Therapy Isn't All Good Or All Bad

To determine if hormone therapy is a good treatment option for you, talk to your doctor about your individual symptoms and health risks. Be sure to...

When Is Hormone Therapy used?

Hormone therapy may be used: 1. If the cancer has spread too far to be cured by surgery or radiation, or if you can’t have these treatments for som...

Possible Side Effects of Hormone Therapy

Orchiectomy and LHRH agonists and antagonists can all cause similar side effects from lower levels of hormones such as testosterone. These side eff...

Current Issues in Hormone Therapy

There are many issues around hormone therapy that not all doctors agree on, such as the best time to start and stop it and the best way to give it....

What is hormone replacement therapy?

By Mayo Clinic Staff. Hormone replacement therapy is medication that contains female hormones. You take the medication to replace the estrogen that your body stops making during menopause. Hormone therapy is most often used to treat common menopausal symptoms, including hot flashes and vaginal discomfort.

How old do you have to be to start hormone therapy?

Age. Women who begin hormone therapy at age 60 or older or more than 10 years from the onset of menopause are at greater risk of the above conditions. But if hormone therapy is started before the age of 60 or within 10 years of menopause, the benefits appear to outweigh the risks. Type of hormone therapy.

What is systemic estrogen?

Systemic estrogen — which comes in pill, skin patch, ring, gel, cream or spray form — typically contains a higher dose of estrogen that is absorbed throughout the body. It can be used to treat any of the common symptoms of menopause. Low-dose vaginal products.

What are the risks of taking estrogen pills?

In the largest clinical trial to date, hormone replacement therapy that consisted of an estrogen-progestin pill (Prempro) increased the risk of certain serious conditions, including: Heart disease. Stroke. Blood clots. Breast cancer.

How often should hormones be reevaluated?

For best results, hormone therapy should be tailored to each person and reevaluated every so often to be sure the benefits still outweigh the risks.

How to manage hot flashes during menopause?

You may be able to manage menopausal hot flashes with healthy-lifestyle approaches such as keeping cool, limiting caffeinated beverages and alcohol, and practicing paced relaxed breathing or other relaxation techniques. There are also several nonhormone prescription medications that may help relieve hot flashes.

How old do you have to be to take estrogen?

Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest amount of time needed to treat your symptoms. If you're younger than age 45, you need enough estrogen to provide protection against the long-term health effects of estrogen deficiency.

What is the goal of hormone therapy?

The goal is to reduce levels of male hormones, called androgens, in the body, or to stop them from fueling prostate cancer cells. Androgens stimulate prostate cancer cells to grow. The main androgens in the body are testosterone ...

What hormones are used to remove testicles?

Estrogens (female hormones) were once the main alternative to removing the testicles (orchiectomy) for men with advanced prostate cancer. Because of their possible side effects (including blood clots and breast enlargement), estrogens have been replaced by other types of hormone therapy.

What are the drugs that help prostate cancer grow?

Anti-androgens. For most prostate cancer cells to grow, androgens have to attach to a protein in the prostate cancer cell called an androgen receptor. Anti-androgens are drugs that also connect to these receptors, keeping the androgens from causing tumor growth.

Where is androgen made?

Most androgen is made by the testicles, but the adrenal glands (glands that sit above your kidneys) as well as the prostate cancer itself, can also make a fair amount. Lowering androgen levels or stopping them from getting into prostate cancer cells often makes prostate cancers shrink or grow more slowly for a time.

Can LHRH antagonists cause prostate cancer?

LHRH antagonists can be used to treat advanced prostate cancer. These drugs work in a slightly different way from the LHRH agonists, but they lower testosterone levels more quickly and don’t cause tumor flare like the LHRH agonists do. Treatment with these drugs can also be considered a form of medical castration.

Does hormone therapy affect memory?

Still, hormone therapy does seem to lead to memory problems in some men. These problems are rarely severe, and most often affect only some types of memory.

Can hormone therapy be used for cancer?

Hormone therapy may be used: If the cancer has spread too far to be cured by surgery or radiation, or if you can’t have these treatments for some other reason. If the cancer remains or comes back after treatment with surgery or radiation therapy.

How many types of HRT are there?

There are different types of HRT. Some have only one hormone, while others have two . Most are pills that you take every day, but there are also skin patches, vaginal creams, gels, and rings. Taking HRT has some risks.

What are the symptoms of menopause?

In the years before and during menopause, the levels of female hormones can go up and down. This can cause symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, pain during sex, and vaginal dryness. For some women, the symptoms are mild, and they go away on their own. Other women take hormone replacement therapy (HRT), also called menopausal hormone therapy, to relieve these symptoms. HRT may also protect against osteoporosis.

Can you take HRT for osteoporosis?

Other women take hormone replacement therapy (HRT), also called menopausal hormone therapy, to relieve these symptoms. HRT may also protect against osteoporosis. HRT is not for everyone. You should not use HRT if you.

Does hormone therapy cause heart attacks?

For some women, hormone therapy may increase their chances of getting blood clots, heart attacks, strokes, breast cancer, and gallbladder disease. Certain types of HRT have a higher risk, and each woman's own risks can vary, depending upon her medical history and lifestyle.

How long does hormone therapy last after surgery?

Sometimes it is started before surgery (as neoadjuvant therapy). It is usually taken for at least 5 to 10 years.

What hormones are used to treat breast cancer?

Hormone Therapy for Breast Cancer. Some types of breast cancer are affected by hormones, like estrogen and progesterone. The breast cancer cells have receptors (proteins) that attach to estrogen and progesterone, which helps them grow. Treatments that stop these hormones from attaching to these receptors are called hormone or endocrine therapy.

How does estrogen help with breast cancer?

Because estrogen encourages hormone receptor-positive breast cancers to grow, lowering the estrogen level can help slow the cancer’s growth or help prevent it from coming back.

Can tamoxifen be used for menopause?

It can be used to treat women with breast cancer who have or have not gone through menopause. Tamoxifen can be used in several ways: In women at high risk of breast cancer, tamoxifen can be used to help lower the risk of developing breast cancer.

Can hormone therapy be used on breast cancer?

Hormone therapy can reach cancer cells almost anywhere in the body and not just in the breast. It's recommended for women with tumors that are hormone receptor-positive. It does not help women whose tumors don't have hormone receptors.

Does tamoxifen block estrogen?

This drug blocks estrogen receptors on breast cancer cells. It stops estrogen from connecting to the cancer cells and telling them to grow and divide. While tamoxifen acts like an anti-estrogen in breast cells, it acts like an estrogen in other tissues, like the uterus and the bones.

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