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Who is bothered most by ADT side effects and why?

Scout4answers profile image
64 Replies

Interesting that they did not mention exercise

Who is bothered most by ADT side effects and why?

April 18, 2022

If you are on ADT or know many men who have been on ADT, you know that there is great variation in how easy it is to tolerate ADT. Some men report few side effects and little bother. Others report being overwhelmed by the side effects and look forward to a time when they might have their testosterone back in the normal range for males.

But what accounts for this diversity in distress from ADT? A dozen researchers, mostly based in the USA, teamed up to find out.

The researchers collected a wealth of psychological data on close to 200 men on ADT at baseline, and again at 6- and 12-month follow-ups.

Three distinct patient profiles emerged from the statistical analyses. Men with “high symptom burden” were younger and exhibited higher “levels of depression, stress, cancer-specific distress, and anxiety” at the start of the study. These men often had more advanced symptomatic disease. They also reported worse hormonal symptoms, such as hot flashes, as well as urinary dysfunction, a high degree of sexual bother, and more physical pain compared to the other two groups.

The second group was labeled as a “high sexual bother” group because their distress was focused foremost on sexual dysfunction. Lastly, about half the men were in a "low symptom burden" category and reported fewer symptoms related to hormonal and urinary symptoms, sexual function and pain.

Men with high symptom burden demonstrated significant reductions in anxiety, depression, and cancer-specific distress as well as increased emotional well-being over time.

The authors suggested that men who had greater social support and self-efficacy had better symptom management.

As proposed by the authors, these patient profiles might be clinically useful for the preemptive identification of the subset of men who are most likely to need psychosocial support to manage ADT side effects.

It is already known that younger men are more likely to be bothered by hot flashes. If they also have urinary problems, such as symptoms related to previous cancer treatments, and have symptomatic metastatic disease, ADT side effects are likely to be particularly burdensome.

To read the study abstract, see: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/351...

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64 Replies
rsgdmd profile image
rsgdmd

Maybe the actual article talks about it, but your T level before starting ADT is likely a big factor. I think older men are (in general) less affected because they likely start with lower testosterone than younger men.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to rsgdmd

In my experience no one talks about EXERCISE. Have consulted with 6 ROs and 2MOs and none have mentioned it.

rsgdmd profile image
rsgdmd in reply to Scout4answers

Agreed. Read about that about 10 days into ADT and have not had the initial levels of fatigue I had since started regular exercise routine.

Currumpaw profile image
Currumpaw in reply to Scout4answers

Yeah Scout!

Such as the very few hours doctors spend on the importance of diet during their education. Most are ignorant when nutrition is inquired about---or --as one once told me, the McDonald's menu supplies all the nutrition needed for health. Or---studies show this supplement or herb or food does nothing --of course not! Our diets are composed of many foods for a reason. Synergy is important.

Currumpaw

duwa profile image
duwa in reply to Currumpaw

Well spoken Currumpaw !!!!!

MichaelDD profile image
MichaelDD in reply to rsgdmd

I started ADT at age 63. My T level was 701. Stage 4 now, metastatic to my lungs. ADT for 2 years+ and T level was non existent. ADT just ate me up. Last 2 years on ADT vacation. My last T count 601 (68 years old) Still have incredible issues with pain and neropothy. For me your synopsis of low T relative to age and effect doesn't apply. Either using ADT or not, T-level none or at a high level ADT hasn't been friendly to me..

Grandpa4 profile image
Grandpa4 in reply to MichaelDD

I am on the other side. Testosterone level of 850 and no side effects. I think I am young getting cancer at 62.

wilcoxsaw profile image
wilcoxsaw in reply to MichaelDD

are your neuropathy issues a result of chemo?

treedown profile image
treedown

Your a poster boy for good attitude in the face of adversity as well!

Don_1213 profile image
Don_1213

Addressing side-effects of ADT:

youtu.be/efza9vq-cg8

youtu.be/YE61HSAsFb0

youtu.be/8n0cIhamFvo

mrscruffy profile image
mrscruffy

I had lots of side effects especially mentally. Went to shrink and hit the gym, doing pretty damn well now

timotur profile image
timotur

There’s also some hidden SE’s beyond those noticeable on the surface, such as bone loss, lengthened QT interval, and NAFLD, all of which I had from only 18 months on ADT.

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply to timotur

Yea noticed the study was pretty narrow in scope.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers

lengthened QT interval, and NAFLD

sorry, what are these?

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

Lengthened QT interval speaks to abnormalities in the cardiac PQRST train …. All the peaks, bumps and valleys in the cardiac electrical signals string have names. Its called the QRS train. On my home blue tooth Kardia ekg device , my wife has a powerful peaks , well defined …textbook QRS train. On the same device, my adt altered QRS train looks nearly unrecognizable … like chicken scratch. And is 1/3 the amplitude of wifey’s signal . Cardiac issues are common with a lot of us ADT guys.

High quality QRS train of my wife
Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Kaliber

Notice my poorly formed qrs train , low amplitude and a quite noticeable bundle branch block indicated in the avl lead. There are zillions more involved here. In this guys report “ lengthen QT interval “ says the timing space between the Qand T peaks are abnormal …longer than they should be.

My QRS train ,
CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply to Kaliber

Yowzer. Well at least your heart rate was 76 bpm. That's about the only good out of that print out. Hmmmm. Although I have no experience.

The guys I encountered as a Corpsman didnt have cardio issues. Too young. I encountered a guy with a pulse of 47. Have never forgot. Freaked me out. He consulted me. "I'm a runner". lol.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to CAMPSOUPS

no biggie yayahahahaya ❤️❤️❤️

Nusch profile image
Nusch in reply to CAMPSOUPS

I‘m running since I was 19, also marathons. Today I run 8-12 kilometers. / day. My pulse in the morning is always below 50, sometimes close to 40. I‘m on iADT since 2017 with Lupron with a few side effects. Also include weight lifting and WFPBD (whole food plant based diet) - no sugars, no oils, no alcohol).

nonm profile image
nonm in reply to Nusch

fruits and olive oil neither?

Nusch profile image
Nusch in reply to nonm

I eat fruits and olives, but avoid oil. Prefer nuts and seeds for fat intake, which I limit to 30 g / day (as good as I can).

Dont08759 profile image
Dont08759 in reply to CAMPSOUPS

that and no ST segment elevation!

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Dont08759

no kidding .. and a whopping pile of other disturbing anomalies yayahahahaya

Grandpa4 profile image
Grandpa4 in reply to CAMPSOUPS

My resting heart rate is 44. I am a cyclist and was a marathon runner.

addicted2cycling profile image
addicted2cycling in reply to CAMPSOUPS

CAMPSOUPS wrote --- " Yowzer. Well at least your heart rate was 76 bpm. That's about the only good out of that print out. Hmmmm. Although I have no experience.

The guys I encountered as a Corpsman didnt have cardio issues. Too young. I encountered a guy with a pulse of 47. Have never forgot. Freaked me out. He consulted me. "I'm a runner". lol."

2015 - GL10 - an almost 65yo endurance cyclist said NO to ADT and went with the bilateral Orchiectomy. Had to have a pre-Op check over and got hooked up to the ECG my pulse was 32bpm. Nurse said "Get up and move around because we need a higher pulse for the recording."

SE's from the Orchiectomy were as expected.

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply to addicted2cycling

Quick give this man some chest compressions. Whoops doesn't need them lol.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to addicted2cycling

my “ at rest “ heart rate is generally in the high 50s, or low 60s ( 63 bpm right now ) … but my low rate isn’t from being well conditioned. Its from all the cardiac drugs I take to counteract the effects of ADT and other medical issues like high BP.

in reply to CAMPSOUPS

I was a distance runner back in school and had a resting pulse lower than that. Now it is mid 60's; I don't run any more but hit the gym 3x a week.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Kaliber

looks like I should have a Karelia to track this.

We live in amazing times

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

it’s called a Kardia , they are on Amazon… $80 for a single channel and about $13O for the one you see here.

You can go to your walk in hospital care provider ekg clinic and get a ekg test done and they will read it for your record. Then go home and run your Kardia, it stores all your tests. Check your ekg from time to time for changes from the ADT drugs or other reasons and keep out ahead of potential problems or have some idea of the direction cancer is headed.

If something changes you can send a photo of the screen to your GP to ask about it.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Kaliber

I wrote Kardia but Siri is a know it all.

Thanks for the info I will order the better one.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

no kidding … sometimes my spellchecker goes insane yayahahahaya.

Gearhead profile image
Gearhead in reply to Kaliber

Alternative is DuoEK by Wellue. No membership plan involved. I have one and I like it.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Gearhead

no membership if you buy the $80 or $130 Kardia as well

Shooter1 profile image
Shooter1

Darned Xtandi alone (well I had and orchi) made me complete invalid.... Half dose , 80 mg let me get my life back.. also held aPca back for over 3 years. Now half way through # 6 and about out of treatments. BAT under way....

Currumpaw profile image
Currumpaw

Stephen Hawking had your attitude, Kaliber!

Stay the course my friend!

Currumpaw

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Currumpaw

and he looks -looked better in his wheel chair yayahahahaya.

❤️❤️❤️

treedown profile image
treedown in reply to Kaliber

But your wheelchair (not really) looks better and I bet its faster!

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to treedown

He always wore a suit and tried to look natty …. In that respect. Wheelchair wise it’s a a Dodge Hellcat vs a Ford Focus yayahahahaya

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS

I don't really have to tell you I'm with treedown on that.

Glad this post came along so you could let that out. Its been a couple years since you spelled it out (I was in a rabbit hole looking for something on the forum and ran into some old post/replies of yours a week or so ago lol).

I think guys newer to here that havent heard that from you kinda need to.

Ya know.

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS in reply to CAMPSOUPS

As you say a rich texture of life here or I say the spice of life.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers

you paint a beautiful pic dude.

I continue to live life at high speed and will until I can ‘t move any more.

Took Coco dancing several times over the long weekend, love twirling her around the floor

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

❤️❤️❤️

Murph256 profile image
Murph256

I agree with all the comments and would add that the best way to stave off cognitive impairment from ADT is through mental exercise, specifically reading. Set aside several hours a day to read, and not just internet research. Read books...novels, non-fiction, biographies...whatever you’re into.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Murph256

I agree, Coco and I will read to each other at breakfast ( non-Fiction) on weekends and when ever she has the time. We have a shared curiosity, we have both been Life Long Learners.

I haven’t met many other ppl who were dx stage 4 in their 40’s, but I can confirm those results from my own experience for sure. My MO said I was an outlier and most patients tolerate ADT very well. They never baselined my T at dx, so I don’t know how much of a fall off I undertook. Now age 50, I still get life stopping hot flashes every hour. The psychological affects almost did me in, thankfully I found an antidepressant that worked. (Zoloft). My second opinion oncologist said my body is screaming for testosterone and eventually it will give up and adjust. 2 years in and I’m losing patience with waiting so I just started estrogen gel (suggested from this group). Praying that this will finally give me some QOL.

I’ve always been a gym rat, so ramping up the exercise wasn’t a big leap for me. The first year I put on 20lbs. I fell into a pretty impactful depression and didn’t eat much. I went from 225 to 180lb. I got as low as 167lb, muscle mass seamed to disintegrate overnight. I follow a DASH diet (cardiovascular diet) and I consider myself in the best shape of my life. Despite all this, my ADT symptoms remain. I’m no longer on lupron, just zytiga/prednisone. My T is still undetectable (been off luprin now for 5mo) The only thing I can testify to is the degree of the hot flashes are less. (No nausea). The overload of sweat remains the same and I don’t notice much a difference in duration. (3-5min on avg.).

I’ve noticed that stress is the biggest factor/trigger and I’ve concentrated the majority of my effort on coping techniques, meditation, psychedelics, anything that helps me better embrace these SE’s instead of fighting it. I remind myself if the story of the man who survived the open ocean… when asked how he survived he said: “when the waves went up, so did I, when the waves went down, so did I.”

Thank you for this post. I don’t think your polluting the forum. Keep up the good work. God bless.

2022
Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to No_stone_unturned

Thank you for this post. I don’t think your polluting the forum.

Hey Stone

Glad it was of interest to you. I take the negative comments in stride. As you may guess I dance to the beat of my internal drummer.

Rick Nelson said it best in Garden Party "Can't please everyone, so you gotta please yourself."

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber

well I think I can address one more aspect of ADT side effects that could contribute on the level of the ekg info. This one related , somewhat, to my particular regimen of Lupron Xtandi Zometa.

This part gets iffy because some of this can be directly related to old age. I think I’d say that this is a direct result of ADT but could be natural geriatric issues , possibly exacerbated the strain and cell influence of ADT drugs. In this case Xtandi which can permeate the blood brain barrier.

Anyway , I’ve had the hissing noise in my ears for a couple years , now I have the high pitched metallic ringing ( ? ) that comes and goes …it’s infrequent. More apropos is the occurrence of TIA ( transit ischemic attacks ) which seem - feel like mini strokes but leave no damage in the brain when looked with a cat scan. Neuropathy . Balance issues, trouble with low level cognitive thinking , serious near term memory loss that catches back up fairly quickly … some other things that my NT memory loss prevents me from accessing instantly yayahahahaya.

Pretty much everything mentioned in the above paragraph is attributed to “ small vessel white matter ischemic attack “ which is damage in your brain in the white matter that connects your brain to everything else. This is the iffy part. It’s quite common , ordinary even, for older folks to have small vessel white matter ischemic damage. I think that my ADT has either directly caused all symptoms mentioned above or exacerbated them strongly. Just IMHO but there is very solid medical scientific study that supports this.

I’ve attached a photo of what a cat scan of the small vessel white matter ischemic brain damage ( not mine but nearly identical , don’t have my copy yet ) looks like. Mine would be someplace between the left ( mild ) the middle one ( moderate ) , closer to mild.

Anyway, this is another aspect of ADT cancer treatment , things are far from what they were “ up there “ yayahahahaya.

Photo of cat scan showing small vessel white matter ischemic brain damage
Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Kaliber

It is amazing how much interesting info this post has elicited.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

is that “ interesting “ …or maybe “ depressing “ yayahahahaya

Love ya buddy ❤️❤️❤️

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

I think your statement should be amplified upon a bit. I think your post was excellent because it provided an opportunity to air out - spell out issues that are almost never talked about in much detail. To other guys on ADT , this info has the potential to be invaluable. Of course everyone is different, but I’ll bet much posted in your thread hit almost everyone on ADT. Lots of other things…like ADT Zombie…for example and others could have been aired but I IMHO , you elicited really great info out of numerous responders. Good work buddy. Both group members and the research data divers will appreciate what you have done.

👏👏👏❤️❤️❤️

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Kaliber

Thanks Kal

It was rewarding to see and hear from posters that seldom post, as usual I learned some new things.

Wish you had not taken down your "life" post and your bong/shrooms post as I thought they were important for others to see. It ain't all peaches and cream but it is definitely about one's attitude in the face of hardship.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to Scout4answers

ooooops about taking down those two posts. Sorry about that.

Sometimes it’s because I feel like there is too much personal stuff and others I do out of respect for Darryl and others here …. Cleaning up some things to make my posts more pure / apropos for the commercial data divers - researchers that comb the site.

Just say’in 😁😁😁😁

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to Kaliber

commercial data divers - researchers that comb the site

elaborate ?

fourputt profile image
fourputt

Scout, Have you read the entire article ? Thinking about purchasing it if you think it's worth it. I've asked two very good Onco's if there was a way to predict ADT's side effects on a patient base on their biological profile and neither gave me any kind of definitive answer.

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers in reply to fourputt

Scout, Have you read the entire article ?

Are you talking about Kardia? not sure which article you are referring to?

Scout4answers profile image
Scout4answers

If someone has to be told to exercise, well it's too late. Don't blame your cancer team blame yourself.

Not sure I follow your logic

joeguy profile image
joeguy

Im highly doubtful that "psychosocial support" wouldnt have done squat to mitigate the cardio toxicities and cognitive side effect I have experienced with various ADT drugs..... but its a nice thought

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to joeguy

ryte on … 👏👏👏

YYJguy profile image
YYJguy

With all due respect, the level of 'health' information and feedback from MO's or MD's in general is disappointing and spartan. This has been frustrated further by the witness of CV19 narratives over last two years, I mean did ANY of the 'health' officials you listened to ever suggest Vitamin D or exercise as a preventative? Just speaks to one being their own advocates for sure, but again ... disappointing. Whole health information from any one medical faction just simply does not exist.

CAMPSOUPS profile image
CAMPSOUPS

It do, it do involve the whole person. Family of often as well.

Kaliber profile image
Kaliber in reply to CAMPSOUPS

good call … you are right, suffers right beside you.

Bret5 profile image
Bret5

I’m 64 yo and I have recently diagnosed metastatic prostate cancer after RP in January. I’m on triple therapy including Eligard and Nubeqa. Testosterone level now undetectable. The only side effect I am seeing are hot flashes especially at night. I would call this annoying but not horrible. My cancer center suggested black cohosh to help with the hot flashes which I am doing. I also have become skilled at adjusting my HVAC temp, using my ceiling fans, and wearing the right clothing.

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