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Prostate cancer: Do you experience hot flashes from hormone therapy?
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baggieboy
baggieboy
Last activity on 17/04/2025 at 23:11
Joined in 2025
Patient, Prostate cancer since 2025
2 comments posted | 2 in the Prostate cancer Forum
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Still getting the hot flushes and now just had my 11th session of radiotherapy, not as many nor as bad, at there worst my tee-shirt would be soaked and my head being bold would be dripping with sweat, only help I found was to find somewhere cold. Luckily no major side effects from the radiotherapy apart from now starting to get very tired
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Somya.P
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Somya.P
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Last activity on 18/04/2025 at 17:00
Joined in 2023
583 comments posted | 19 in the Prostate cancer Forum
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Hi everyone,
Hope you're doing well today!
Hot flushes are a common side effect of hormone therapy for prostate cancer, especially for those on LHRH agonists or anti-androgens. In fact, up to 80% of men on these treatments experience them. For some, the flushes improve over time, but for others, they continue throughout the course of treatment.
They can range from a few seconds of feeling warm to hours of intense sweating. You might feel flushed in your face, chest, neck or back, and sometimes you’re left feeling cold and drained afterwards. At night, they can also disrupt sleep and leave you feeling exhausted.
Do you get hot flushes during your hormone therapy?
What do yours feel like: mild, moderate, or severe?
Have they affected your daily life or sleep?
Have you found any ways to manage them?
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Whether you’ve had them for a while or you’re just starting hormone treatment, your experience could really help others know what to expect and how to cope.
Take care,
Somya from the Carenity Team 🌼