Overview
Hormone therapy is the medical use of hormones, or agents that modify hormone activity, to correct deficiency, suppress excess, or alter hormone-dependent processes in the body. It encompasses replacement of hormones that are insufficient, as in menopausal hormone therapy and treatment of endocrine deficiencies, as well as therapies that block or modulate hormonal pathways, such as those used in hormone-sensitive cancers and reproductive medicine. The approach works by restoring physiological signaling or by interrupting the stimulation that drives a disease, and it is tailored to the target condition, the hormones involved, and the patient's individual risk profile. Common applications include managing menopausal symptoms, supporting fertility and assisted reproduction through controlled ovarian stimulation, treating growth and developmental hormone disorders, and providing endocrine treatment for cancers of the breast, prostate, and other tissues whose growth depends on hormonal signaling. Because hormones act broadly across organ systems, therapy requires careful balancing of benefits against risks, including effects on cardiovascular, metabolic, and oncological health, and it is guided by monitoring of hormone levels and clinical response. Decisions weigh symptom relief and disease control against potential adverse effects, with regimens individualized over time. Studying hormone therapy integrates endocrinology, reproductive medicine, and oncology to understand how manipulating hormonal signaling can treat deficiency, suppress hormone-driven disease, and improve patient outcomes while managing associated risks.
Research published in this journal
7 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Mild Ovarian Stimulation has Similar Live Birth Rates as Compared with Hyper Stimulation for Treatment of Poor Responding IVF Patients of Advanced Maternal Age
Signal Transduction of hCG Induces Decidualization and Uterine Receptivity
Markers for Significant or High-Grade Prostate Cancer in Patients over 75 Years Undergoing Prostatic Biopsy
Risk Factors Associated with Breast Cancer
Non-Specific Steroid Cell Tumor of The Ovary: Case Report And Review of The Literature
Outcomes of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Patients Treated with Surgery and Radioactive Iodine at SQCCCRC
How this research is being cited
The 7 articles above have been cited 1 time in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2017 · Journal of Fertility Biomarkers
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Hormone Therapy, linking to each citing work.