Some types of cancer, such as breast and prostate cancer, depend on sex hormones to grow. Hormone therapy prevents cancer cells from receiving or using the hormones they need. Hormone therapy may include surgery to remove organs in the endocrine system that make hormones. In other cases, hormone therapy relies on drugs to stop hormone production or change the way hormones work. Antiestrogen drugs, such as tamoxifen and raloxifene, given to women with breast cancer block estrogen and inhibit its ability to stimulate cell growth.
Sometimes called designer estrogens, these drugs cause only mild side effects because treatment is limited to tissues affected by hormones. Androgen blockers are given to men with prostate cancer to block the production of testosterone and other male hormones that may contribute to cancer growth.
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