Prostate Cancer and Dating: When and How to Tell Someone About Your Diagnosis

When you have prostate cancer, dating can feel more like a minefield than a walk in the park. What’s the right time to tell a potential partner about your condition? And how should you bring it up?
When Is It the ‘Right’ Time?
You have full control over how and when you share details of your prostate cancer diagnosis with a dating partner. If you’re not sure how you want to handle it, you can start by looking at a few factors.
Emotional Readiness
Regardless of how your potential partner may feel about dating someone with cancer, it’s important to understand if you are ready for dating.
A prostate cancer diagnosis can spark a wide range of emotions, including anger, grief, and fear, says Brandi Jurecek, LCSW, a social worker at Texas Oncology in Plano, Texas.
“It can cause a shift in identity that requires time to understand, adapt to, and accept,” she says.
Ask yourself if you still feel emotionally overwhelmed by your diagnosis or if you feel you have the emotional space to connect with someone new, Jurecek says.
Now vs. Later: Pros and Cons
Sharing a prostate cancer diagnosis and its various treatment side effects on a first date may feel too early. But it can also “weed out” bad matches quickly.
If You Don’t Feel Ready to Talk About It
If you can’t imagine telling a date about your diagnosis but don’t know how to move forward, you have options. Dr. Dubin strongly recommends joining a support group for men experiencing similar symptoms and challenges. It helps to hear others’ stories and be part of a community, he says, and it can raise your comfort level if you don’t otherwise know how to do it.
How to Start the Conversation
Even if you feel ready to tell a potential partner about your diagnosis, you may not know where to start.
“Language is important when sharing personal information,” says Jurecek, who suggests framing your cancer diagnosis as an event you have successfully navigated instead of an uncomfortable confession.
“Cancer is something that you have experienced, not something that defines you,” she says.
Conversation starters, she says, may include:
- “I have enjoyed getting to know you and would like to share something about myself.”
- "I want to be open with you about something I've been navigating."
- "I've had some health challenges recently that I'd like to share."
“Instead of sharing your diagnosis as something embarrassing, use confident language that focuses on honesty and resilience,” Jurecek says.
As an example, she suggests saying: “I had prostate cancer, went through treatment, and now I am doing well. I think honesty is important as we get to know each other.”
Addressing the ‘Elephants in the Room’: Side Effects and Intimacy
Conversations about sexual function can feel awkward, especially with someone you don’t know well yet. Prostate cancer and its treatment can cause erectile dysfunction and incontinence, which can be difficult to talk about. But if you use empowering language, you can explain your sexual journey with confidence.
For example, you can describe your current symptoms and also discuss treatment options you’re considering and the possibility of symptoms fading after a while. It can take months or years, but many men notice a return in erectile function, says Hugh J. Lavery, MD, the chief of the division of urology at Stamford Health in Connecticut.
“Healthy intimacy during treatment focuses on a couple’s ability to be open, talk through feelings and fears, and find new ways to connect if the sexual side of the relationship looks different,” Jurecek says.
Remember to be patient with yourself and your partner because it will take time to figure out your new sexual normal, she says.
Navigating the Reaction
With or without prostate cancer, the fear of rejection after a date might hover like a gray cloud on the horizon. But after you share your prostate cancer journey, your potential partners may respond with compassion, acceptance, and no loss of interest.
If they don’t, it’s normal to feel hurt and ashamed, Jurecek says.
“It is important to recognize that the reaction is not reflective of your worth but that person’s inability to handle the situation,” she says.
After a poor reaction, reach out to your sex therapist, support group, or loved one, Dubin says. If you don’t have a community to lean on yet, your healthcare team can help you find resources.
Although dating can be tough, you deserve the relationship you want. Keep trying and remember that open communication is the key to strong relationships.
“The right person will respond with compassion and kindness and will not be afraid to engage in a meaningful relationship,” Jurecek says.
The Takeaway
- Navigating dating with a prostate cancer diagnosis can be challenging. But open communication and honest conversations can foster meaningful connections and intimate relationships.
- The “right time” to tell a partner about your diagnosis is up to you. It depends on your own emotional readiness, and it may be more of a process than a one-time conversation.
- Remember to use empowering language when you tell your date about your diagnosis. Instead of apologizing for your condition or limitations, frame your journey as overcoming a challenge.
- Your healthcare team, as well as support groups and therapists, can help you understand your condition and build your comfort with intimacy and sharing potential side effects of your treatment.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Maintaining Your Sex Life After Prostate Cancer
- American Cancer Society: Dating and Relationships During and After Cancer
- Mayo Clinic: What to Know About Erectile Dysfunction and Prostate Cancer
- National Cancer Institute: Sexual Health Issues in Men With Cancer
- Prostate Cancer Foundation: Support Groups
- Prostate Cancer Treatment (PDQ®)–Patient Version. National Cancer Institute. December 20, 2024.
- Solan M. 7 Strategies for Partnering Up With ED. Harvard Health Publishing. November 19, 2020.
- Maintaining Your Sex Life After Prostate Cancer. Cleveland Clinic. January 6, 2023.
- Sexual Health Issues in Men with Cancer. National Cancer Institute. December 29, 2022.
- 6 Things to Do When You Start Dating While Battling Cancer. Cleveland Clinic. March 9, 2021.

Christopher Wolter, MD
Medical Reviewer
Christopher Wolter, MD, is an assistant professor in urology at Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona. He has been in practice since 2008, specializing in the areas of urinary incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, urologic reconstruction, urologic prosthetics, post prostate cancer survivorship, erectile dysfunction, neurourology and neuromodulation, and overall functional considerations of urogenital health.
Dr. Wolter has been heavily involved in urologic education. He spent the last 12 years heavily involved in resident education and leadership for his department, including the last eight years as urology residency program director. He currently serves as the director of urologic education for the preclinical and clinical rotations for the Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine Phoenix, Arizona, campus.
Wolter completed his undergraduate and medical education at the University of Illinois. He then completed his urology residency at Tulane University in New Orleans, followed by a fellowship in female pelvic medicine and reconstructive urology at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

Abby McCoy, RN
Author
Abby McCoy is an experienced registered nurse who has worked with adults and pediatric patients encompassing trauma, orthopedics, home care, transplant, and case management. She is a married mother of four and loves the circus — that is her home! She has family all over the world, and loves to travel as much as possible.
McCoy has written for publications like Remedy Health Media, Sleepopolis, and Expectful. She is passionate about health education and loves using her experience and knowledge in her writing.