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Many people believe that only women have breast cancer. Although very rare, about 1% of breast cancer occurs in adult males.3, 2 It develops in the small amount of breast tissue found behind a man's nipple.
Although the exact cause of breast cancer is not known, most experts agree that some men have a greater risk for breast cancer than others. Factors that may increase a man's risk of breast cancer include:1
The most common symptom of male breast cancer is a painless lump or swelling behind the nipple. Other symptoms can include a discharge from the nipple or a lump or thickening in the armpit. Although most men diagnosed with breast cancer are older than 65, breast cancer can appear in younger men. For this reason, any breast lump in an adult male is considered abnormal.
Most male breast cancer is diagnosed with a biopsy to investigate a lump or thickening in the breast or armpit. Because there is no routine screening for breast cancer and a breast lump does not usually cause pain, sometimes breast cancer isn't discovered until it has spread to another area of the body and is causing other symptoms.
The main treatment for male breast cancer is surgery (mastectomy) to remove the breast. Because most men do not have very much breast tissue, breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) is not used. Radiation therapy is not routinely used to treat breast cancer in men.
Medicines (chemotherapy) to destroy any remaining cancer cells are used after surgery to reduce the chance that breast cancer will come back somewhere else in the body. If the breast cancer is sensitive to certain hormones (meaning that the cells have estrogen/progesterone receptors), male breast cancer is treated with a hormone-blocking agent called tamoxifen. Male breast cancer usually responds very well to chemotherapy or hormone therapy.
Male breast cancer is rare and makes up only about 1% of all breast cancers discovered each year. For this reason, many experts encourage men with breast cancer to talk to their doctors about clinical trials. These trials continue to look for better ways to treat male breast cancer.
| By: | Healthwise Staff | Last Revised: February 23, 2010 |
| Medical Review: | Joy Melnikow, MD, MPH - Family Medicine Douglas A. Stewart, MD - Medical Oncology | |
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