Male Breast Cancer
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 188 (1) , 60-65
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-197807000-00010
Abstract
From 1949 through 1976, 97 men have been treated at Memorial Hospital for primary operable breast cancer. Seven per cent had intraductal carcinoma. Of the patients with invasive carcinoma 30% were pathologic stage I, 54% stage II, and 16% stage III. Fourty-six per cent had pathologically negative axillary lymph nodes. The most common type of tumor was infiltrating duct carcinoma. Fourty per cent of the patients had microscopic gynecomastia. None of the eight patients with intraductal or intracystic carcinoma died of cancer. Survival of the entire group of men with invasive carcinoma was 40% after ten years. The ten-year survival for men with negative nodes was 79%, for men with positive nodes 11%. Comparison with a series of 304 women with breast cancer operated on at Memorial Hospital in 1960 revealed no difference with regard to incidence of positive axillary lymph nodes or stage of disease. There was, however, a significantly lower survival rate for men. This poorer prognosis was limited to those men with pathologically positive axillary nodes.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- A comparative study of some pathologic features of mammary carcinoma in Tokyo, Japan and New York, USACancer, 1977
- Ten-year results of the treatment of primary operable breast carcinoma.A summary of 304 patients evaluated by the TNM systemCancer, 1976
- Male breast cancer: a reviewCancer Treatment Reviews, 1976
- Carcinoma of the male breast: Report of a series of 88 casesClinical Radiology, 1976
- The survival rate of men with carcinoma of the breastBritish Journal of Surgery, 1975
- Breast cancer in men.1974
- Carcinoma of the Male BreastArchives of Surgery, 1973
- Carcinoma of the male breast.1972
- Carcinoma of the male breastCancer, 1969
- Serous and Serosanguineous Discharge from the Male NippleArchives of Surgery, 1956