What is breast cancer?
Breast cancer is a growth of abnormal cells in the breast. Men
have a very small amount of breast tissue right under the nipple.
This breast tissue can develop cancer, just like women's breasts
can become cancerous. However, breast cancer in men is rare. There
are about 2,000 cases per year in the US. Less than 1% of all
breast cancers are in men. It usually affects men in their 60s.
How does it occur?
It is not really known why some men get breast cancer. It may be
related to hormone levels. There may be a genetic (inherited)
factor.
What are the symptoms?
Male breast cancer symptoms may include:
- breast lump
- discharge from the nipple
- change in nipple shape or appearance
- scaly rash on the nipple.
See your healthcare provider right away if you have any of these
symptoms.
How is it diagnosed?
If you have discharge from a nipple, some of the discharge can be
placed on a microscope slide and examined for cancer cells. If you
have a breast lump or nipple rash, the tissue must be biopsied. A
needle biopsy or surgical biopsy may be done.
- When you have a needle biopsy, you are given a local
anesthetic to numb the area of the breast being tested. Then
your healthcare provider inserts a needle into the breast lump
and withdraws fluid or tissue from the lump. If fluid fills
the needle, the lump is probably a cyst and not cancer.
Removing the fluid also makes fluid-filled lumps go away.
Tissue withdrawn by the needle will be examined in the lab by
a pathologist.
- If you have a surgical biopsy, you will have a local
anesthetic. The surgeon will make a cut in the skin and remove
some or all of the lump. The tissue from the lump will be
examined under a microscope. If cancer is found, you will also
have lymph nodes removed from your armpit on the same side to
see if cancer has spread beyond the breast to the lymph nodes.
How is it treated?
Surgery is the standard treatment. This usually involves removing
the nipple, all breast tissue, and the lymph nodes in the armpit.
How much needs to be removed depends on how far the tumor appears
to have spread. After surgery it is common to have treatment with
anticancer drugs (hormones, chemotherapy) and/or radiation
therapy. Never take male hormones.
How can I take care of myself?
- Follow your healthcare provider's instructions for recovering
from surgery.
- Keep yourself as healthy as possible by eating healthy foods
(fruits, vegetables and whole grains), exercising according to
your provider's advice, and not smoking.
- Ask your provider if or when you may drink alcohol.
- When you are ready, a support group for men surviving cancer
is a good way to understand your own emotions as well as those
of your family members. This is a good way to stay mentally
healthy and to keep good family communication going during and
after treatment.
For more information on cancer, contact national and local
organizations such as:
- American Cancer Society, Inc.
Phone: 800-ACS-2345 (800-227-2345)
Web site: http://www.cancer.org
- National Cancer Institute
Phone: 1-800-4CANCER, or 1-800-422-6237 (TTY: 1-800-332-8615)
Web site: http://www.cancer.gov
What can I do to prevent breast cancer?
We do not know how to prevent breast cancer in men.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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