Treatment options for prostate cancer
This page tells you about the various choices of treatment for prostate cancer. There is information about
Choices of treatment for prostate cancer
Your doctor will discuss the possible side effects and benefits of each treatment.
Low risk localised prostate cancer is very unlikely to grow or develop for many years. You are likely to be offered active monitoring (also called active surveillance) to monitor the cancer and see whether it begins to develop. This is because your prostate cancer may be so slow growing that it never causes any symptoms. If the cancer starts to develop, your doctor will offer you treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or radiotherapy.
Men with intermediate risk localised prostate cancer are likely to be offered treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or external radiotherapy. Or you may be offered active monitoring or internal radiotherapy. Men who have high risk localised prostate cancer are usually offered treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or external radiotherapy to the prostate.
If the cancer has broken through the capsule surrounding the prostate gland, this is called locally advanced prostate cancer. Surgery or radiotherapy may be combined with a course of hormone treatment.
If prostate cancer comes back after your initial treatment, you may have hormone therapy. If you had surgery as your initial treatment, you may have radiotherapy. If your prostate cancer has spread, it cannot be cured. But it can be controlled by lowering the level of testosterone in the body with hormone therapy.
You can view and print the quick guides for all the pages in the Treating prostate cancer section.
Treatment for prostate cancer depends on a number of different factors. Medical organisations in Europe and the USA recommend that treatment is considered individually for every man with prostate cancer. Your doctors will look at all the different factors and discuss with you which treatments may help you. They will discuss the possible side effects and benefits of each treatment. So make sure you tell them about your wishes and concerns.
In 2008, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) issued guidance about treatment options for prostate cancer. You can see the guidelines on the NICE website.
You will probably come across other men with prostate cancer who are having different treatment to you. This is because they have a different stage or grade. Or their particular needs may be different. Also, sometimes doctors have different views about treatment. If you have any questions about your own treatment, don't be afraid to ask your doctor or nurse.
If the prostate cancer is contained within the prostate gland it is called localised prostate cancer. Doctors look at different factors to divide men into different groups, according to whether the cancer is likely to grow quickly or slowly, or whether it is likely to spread. They use this information to work out which treatments are best for each man. You can find information about low risk, intermediate risk and high risk prostate cancer in this section of CancerHelp UK. This page tells you about
- Treatment for low risk localised prostate cancer
- Treatment for intermediate risk localised prostate cancer
- Treatment for high risk localised prostate cancer
Low risk localised prostate cancer
Low risk localised prostate cancer is very unlikely to grow or develop for many years. You are likely to be offered active monitoring (also called active surveillance) to monitor the cancer for a time and see whether it begins to develop. This is because your prostate cancer may be so slow growing that it never causes any symptoms. Treatments for prostate cancer can cause long term side effects, so doctors try to avoid giving treatments if they can safely do that. If the cancer starts to develop while you are having active monitoring, your doctor will offer you treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or radiotherapy to the prostate.
In 2006, some researchers used a computer model to predict that for men between 55 and 74 years with low risk prostate cancer, 99% would live for at least 15 years if they have no treatment. We need more evidence of this in practice, so some trials are comparing active monitoring with giving surgery or radiotherapy for localised prostate cancer. There are details of the ProtecT and ProSTART trials on our clinical trials database. Choose 'prostate' from the list of cancer types.
In younger men, the risk of the cancer growing within their lifetime is higher, so doctors may offer treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or radiotherapy to the prostate at an earlier stage than in older men.
Cryotherapy and high frequency ultrasound therapy are not standard treatments but they may be offered as part of clinical trials.
Intermediate risk localised prostate cancer
In men with intermediate risk prostate cancer, the cancer may start to grow or spread within a few years and so you are likely to be offered treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or external radiotherapy to the prostate. Surgery and radiotherapy work equally well in curing the cancer but they have different risks, benefits and side effects. Your doctor can explain these to you and they are also discussed later in this section. Other treatment options that you may be offered are active monitoring or internal radiotherapy (brachytherapy).
Cryotherapy and high frequency ultrasound therapy are not standard treatments but they may be offered as part of clinical trials.
High risk localised prostate cancer
High risk prostate cancer may start to grow or spread within a couple of years and doctors usually offer treatment with surgery to remove the prostate gland or external radiotherapy to the prostate. Internal radiotherapy (brachytherapy) is not often used, because in high risk prostate cancer the cancer cells may have spread slightly away from the prostate gland and internal radiotherapy may not reach all of the cells. For men who are not fit enough to have radiotherapy or surgery, doctors may recommend active monitoring as a treatment option.
If the cancer has broken through the capsule surrounding the prostate gland, this is called locally advanced prostate cancer. For locally advanced prostate cancer, surgery to remove the prostate gland or external radiotherapy to the prostate may be combined with a course of hormone treatment. You may have hormone therapy before surgery or radiotherapy, or afterwards for up to 3 years. Men who cannot have surgery or radiotherapy because they are not fit enough may have a course of hormone therapy as a treatment on its own.
Cryotherapy and high frequency ultrasound therapy are not standard treatments but they may be offered as part of clinical trials.
If prostate cancer comes back after your initial treatment, your doctors are likely to offer treatment with hormone therapy if you have symptoms. If you had surgery as your first treatment, your doctors are most likely to recommend external radiotherapy to the prostate.
Cryotherapy and high frequency ultrasound therapy are not standard treatments but they may be offered as part of clinical trials.
If your prostate cancer has spread to other parts of the body, it cannot be cured. But it can be controlled by lowering the level of testosterone in the body with hormone therapy. You can have hormone therapy as
- Tablets you take each day
- Injections each month or every 3 months
- Tablets for a few months, then a break, followed by more tablets, and so on
Another way of reducing testosterone levels is removing the testicles. This is called 'medical castration' or orchidectomy. It quickly lowers the testosterone levels and can control the cancer very well. There is detailed information about orchidectomy in this section of CancerHelp UK.
Orchidectomy or hormone therapy can control the cancer for a few years in many men. When the cancer starts to develop again, your doctors may suggest treatment with chemotherapy or steroids. These can control or shrink the cancer for some time. There are a few chemotherapy drugs that work for some men with advanced prostate cancer. There is more about chemotherapy for prostate cancer in this section of CancerHelp UK, and some information on chemotherapy research on our prostate cancer research page.
If your cancer has spread to the bones and is causing you pain, your specialist may suggest radiotherapy to the affected areas of bone. Radiotherapy for bone pain can work very well to strengthen the bone and relieve pain. The damaged bone begins to repair itself after radiotherapy treatment.




