Male Breast Cancer

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June is Men’s Health Month, a time usually dedicated to conversations around heart health, prostate checks, and mental well-being. But there is another critical health topic that often gets left out of the locker room talk: breast cancer.

While it is significantly less common in men than in women, it is no less serious. The biggest danger men face regarding breast cancer isn’t the disease itself—it’s the lack of awareness and the stigma surrounding it.

Because breast cancer is widely viewed as a women’s disease, men are far more likely to be diagnosed at a later stage, when the cancer may have spread and treatment becomes much more complex. This June, it’s time to change the narrative.

The Screening Gap: Why You Are Your Own Best Defense

Women are encouraged to get routine mammograms starting in their 40s. Men, however, have no routine screening guidelines for breast cancer. Because doctors aren’t actively looking for it during annual checkups, vigilance and self-awareness are your primary defenses.

Men have breast tissue just like women do, though in smaller amounts. Because there is less tissue, a growth or abnormality is often easier to physically feel—if you know what to look for.

Red Flags: Signs Every Man Should Know

A cancerous lump in a man’s chest is typically small, firm, and painless in its early stages. Do not assume that a lack of pain means a lump is harmless.

Keep an eye out for these key symptoms:

  • A firm lump: Usually located directly behind or right next to the nipple.
  • Skin changes: Dimpling, puckering, scaling, or redness on the skin over the breast tissue.
  • Nipple changes: A nipple that suddenly starts pulling inward (retraction).
  • Discharge: Any clear or bloody fluid leaking from the nipple.

Overcoming the Hesitation to Speak Up

If you notice a physical change, the most critical step you can take is to talk to a healthcare professional immediately. Yet, many men delay making that appointment. Why?

  1. Embarrassment: The stigma of a “women’s disease” causes many men to feel awkward or downplay their symptoms, hoping they will just go away.
  2. Assuming it’s nothing: Because the lumps rarely hurt at first, it is easy to mistake them for a harmless muscle strain or a minor cyst.
  3. Ignoring family history: Genetic mutations like BRCA1 and BRCA2 significantly increase the risk of breast cancer in men. If your mother, sister, or aunt had breast or ovarian cancer, you carry that genetic risk, too. Sharing this family history with your doctor is vital.

Your Action Plan This June

Normalizing this conversation can quite literally save a life. This Men’s Health Month, take control of your health with three simple steps:

  1. Get familiar: Pay attention to your body so you can recognize if something feels different or uneven.
  2. Know your history: Ask your family about any history of breast, ovarian, or prostate cancers.
  3. Speak up without delay: If you find a lump or see skin changes, bypass the hesitation and call your doctor.

Are you a looking to share your story to help improve awareness about male breast cancer?
Email us at: social@breastcancer.ca

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