Times Colonist

Man plagued by hot flashes and night sweats

- DR. KEITH ROACH Your Good Health Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporat­e them in the column whenever possible. Readers can email questions to ToYourGood­Health@ med.cornell.edu.

Dear Dr. Roach: My husband successful­ly completed 45 days of radiation for prostate cancer. His last PSA was non-detectable. He has to take medication for two years as part of the cure.

However, it is causing him to have horrible hot flashes and night sweats. The usual over-thecounter solutions for women do not seem to be helping at all. Would you suggest something designed for a male?

P.B.

The first effective treatment for prostate cancer was depriving the cancer cells of androgens, which was initially done surgically, by removing the testes. It is done now with medication­s that act similar to gonadotrop­in-releasing hormone. Although these initially stimulate testostero­ne production, their continued use causes lower levels of testostero­ne, and within a month testostero­ne levels drop to the same levels as in men who have had surgery to remove their testes.

Hot flashes occur in 80% of men and can be very disruptive. Treatments that are effective for women are often not effective in men, as you observed.

The best-studied and most effective treatments in men were medroxypro­gesterone (a hormone that opposes some actions of estrogen) and cyproteron­e (an antiandrog­en available in Canada, but not the U.S.). It reduced hot flashes by 84% to 95% in men. Venlafaxin­e, normally used as an antidepres­sant, reduced symptoms by 50%, and gabapentin, used for epilepsy or for nerve pain, reduced symptoms by about 45%.

It’s very important to treat the symptoms so he can continue this treatment, which is part of his best chance for long-term remission from prostate cancer.

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