Prostate cancer is a disease of older men, with more than 80% of cases being diagnosed in men 65 years of age and older. Broader participation in screening and early detection programs has resulted in many diagnoses being made earlier in the course of the disease. However, an estimated 25-30% of cases among older men will be diagnosed as metastatic disease. These will be men initially diagnosed with metastatic disease as well as men previously treated for localized disease that has progressed to metastatic disease. The treatment of metastatic prostate cancer has been straightforward. Objective prognostic factors are assessed, and recommendations for the most suitable hormonal therapy are made. Androgen withdrawal, androgen blockade, or combination therapy are current first-line treatment modalities. Patients with good prognostic factors will generally do well for a long time, even experiencing a time-limited remission. Patients with a poor prognosis will die of their disease, with median survival being 18 months. Pretreatment assessment of men diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer should include prognostic factors (tumor volume, histologic grade, DNA ploidy, and prostate specific antigen), health status (comorbidity and performance status), quality of life factors (as a baseline against which to evaluate subjective response and to predict subjective progression), and psychosocial dimensions (sexuality and sexual function, self image, sociability, and social support). Each of these assessment areas will provide important predictors for suitable treatment, response and progression, and survival. The challenge presented is the time and difficulty involved in weighing all these areas and in making an informed physician-patient decision on the most appropriate treatment plan. The physician must direct a health care team to treat metastatic prostate cancer effectively. This team includes oncology nurses, dietitians, social workers, spouses, significant others, and the patient himself.