Background: Male breast cancer is rare and experience of it in any single institution is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate the presentation, management and outcome of male patients with breast cancer treated at Concord Repatriation General Hospital over a 38-year period and to determine a best-practice protocol based on the results and a review of the literature. Methods: A total of 42 patients were retrospectively reviewed, pathology slides were re-examined and reclassified where necessary. Outcome was assessed and compared with results obtained from a literature review. Results: A trend towards less radical surgery has emerged. Overall 5-year survival was 50%, but, due to the late age at presentation, more than half the deaths were non-breast cancer related. One quarter of the patients presented with locally advanced or metastatic disease. Conclusions: The presentation, diagnosis pathology and outcome of breast cancer are similar in men and women, although the disease occurs at a later age in men. Radical surgery is not required in order to gain local control, but knowledge of axillary node status is important in determining prognosis and the need for adjuvant therapy.
CITATION STYLE
Carmalt, H. L., Mann, L. J., Kennedy, C. W., Fletcher, J. M., & Gillett, D. J. (1998). Carcinoma of the male breast: A review and recommendations for management. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 68(10), 712–715. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-2197.1998.tb04657.x
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