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Male Breast Cancer

Introduction

Male breast cancer remains under diagnosed and due to delays in diagnosis is often also under treated. The investigation and management of male breast cancer is based on studies on female patients. At present there is a need for further research into male breast cancer.

Epidemiology
  • A rare disease (less than 300 cases diagnosed per year).1
  • Unimodal distribution in men (bimodal in women)'
  • Peak age for presentation > 60 years
  • Europe - prevalence of 1 in 100,000 (<1% of all breast cancer is in men).2 Mortality has remained static.
  • Wide variation in incidence, for example, high rates in Zambia (thought to be related to hyperoestrogenism from endemic liver infections).
  • Lower incidence is seen in Japan (for both men and women).2
  • Incidence rates are rising, which may actually be a reflection of increasing age of the population.
Risk Factors
  1. Increasing age.
  2. Genetics.
    • Up to one fifth of men with breast cancer have a first degree relative similarly affected.
    • More commonly associated with BRCA2 mutations.1
  3. Lifestyle.
    • Hot environments e.g. furnace work.
    • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (as in petrol and exhaust fumes).
  4. Hyperoestrogenism.
    • Exogenous oestrogen.
    • Klinefelter's syndrome (47XYY) - low testosterone and increased gonadotrophins. Breast cancer is up to 50 times more frequent in this group.1,3
    • Obesity.
    • Chronic liver conditions.
    • Pituitary adenomas leading to hyperprolactinaemia (associated with bilateral breast cancer).
    • Gynaecomastia does not lead to an increased risk.
  5. Alcohol consumption.
  6. Chest irradiation.
Presentation

Symptoms

  • Painless lump
  • Pain (rarely)
  • Nipple inversion or discharge3
  • Skin changes e.g. ulceration.

Signs

  • Skin change
  • Palpable mass
  • Palpable lymph nodes.
Types of breast cancer
  • 90% Invasive ductal1
  • 10% Ductal carcinoma in situ
  • Others e.g. medullary, mucinous and Paget's.

Majority of tumours are grade III in men at time of presentation.

Oestrogen receptor positivity

It is estimated that more than 90% of male breast cancer is oestrogen receptor positive, and even higher values are progesterone receptor positive.
Male breast cancer tissue may also be positive for androgen receptors (although, values reported vary widely).

Diagnosis
  1. Clinical - based on history and examination.
  2. Imaging: mammography (sensitivity 92% and specificity 90%) / ultrasonography2,3
  3. Tissue: FNAC or biopsy (core or open). Biopsy is preferred as malignant cells on FNAC may be a ductal carcinoma in situ rather than more invasive disease.
Management
  1. Surgery: wide local excision or mastectomy (more common in men as paucity of breast tissue and nipple usually removed). This may be associated with axillary lymph node sampling and clearance. Sentinel node biopsy is being used in clinically node-negative disease. May need skin flap or nipple reconstruction2,3,4
  2. Radiotherapy: adjuvant local radiotherapy or post-mastectomy. Regional lymph nodes may also be treated with radiotherapy.
  3. Antioestrogen therapy: tamoxifen is used (as in women).3
  4. Chemotherapy: regimens using cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil and taxanes have been used with improved survival rates. The role of taxanes however, remains to be elucidated. There is currently no information on the role of trastuzumab in male breast cancer.2
  5. Metastatic or more advanced disease: hormonal therapies are the main treatments used. Chemotherapy has been used as a second line (and for palliative purposes also).5,6
  6. Other therapies that have been used:2,3
    • Gonadal ablation in metastatic male breast cancer
    • Orchidectomy
    • Adrenalectomy
    • Hypophysectomy
    • Adjuvant aromatase inhibitors e.g. anastrozole.
Prognosis

There is often a delay in diagnosis of male breast cancer, thus prognosis at presentation is worse in comparison to women.

  • 5 year survival depends on the stage of the disease (75-100% for stage I diseases and 30-60% for stage III disease).3
  • Disease involving the other breast is also increased.6

Document References
  1. Weiss JR, Moysich KB, Swede H; Epidemiology of male breast cancer. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2005 Jan;14(1):20-6. [abstract]
  2. Fentiman IS, Fourquet A, Hortobagyi GN; Male breast cancer. Lancet. 2006 Feb 18;367(9510):595-604. [abstract]
  3. Giordano SH; A review of the diagnosis and management of male breast cancer. Oncologist. 2005 Aug;10(7):471-9. [abstract]
  4. National Cancer Institute - Male Breast Cancer Treatment
  5. Cancer BACUP - Breast Cancer in Men
  6. Breast Cancer in Men. Cancer Research UK
Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Gurvinder Rull for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 2417
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp25257
Last Updated: 27 Nov 2006
Review Date: 26 Nov 2008








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PS - Health and Poverty

Perhaps the biggest cause of ill health in the world is poverty. Help to Make Poverty History. For example, why not lend some of your money to disadvantaged communities to enable them to trade their way out of poverty through schemes such as Shared Interest.

See also MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY North East for details and links to campaigns against poverty.

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