
Com'è avere il cancro al seno quando sei un uomo
Revisione paritaria di Dr Sarah JarvisUltimo aggiornamento di Abi MillarUltimo aggiornamento 27 Sept 2019
Rispetta le linee guida editoriali
- ScaricaScarica
- Condividi
- Language
- Discussione
- Versione audio
- Aggiungi alle fonti preferite su Google
While breast cancer is often perceived as a women's disease, men can be diagnosed too. We spoke to Tony Herbert, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2011.
In August 2010, Tony Herbert was on a safari holiday in Namibia when he felt a soreness in his nipple. Putting it down to a chafing seatbelt, he didn't think anything of it, but the pain persisted when he got home. By October, there was a lump under his nipple, which grew to be around an inch in diameter.
"I could feel it easily but I didn't do anything about it," he recalls. "In January 2011, I was sitting on the settee when my wife prodded me in the chest. She said I should go to the doctor and get it looked at. So essentially I spent five months without doing anything, assuming it must be a cyst."
While his GP agreed it was probably nothing serious, he referred Herbert to a breast clinic as a precaution. This decision could well have saved Herbert's life.
"When the GP at the breast clinic examined me, I could see by her face that it was cancro al seno," says Herbert. "I was referred for a biopsy and we got the results on the Tuesday. The surgeon operated on the Friday."
What breast cancer looks like in men
While breast cancer is often considered a women's disease, men can develop the condition too. And while the prevalence is much lower - 370 men are diagnosed each year in the UK, compared to around 62,000 women - it's just as important for men to be aware of any changes in their body.
As Catherine Priestley, a clinical nurse specialist at Breast Cancer Care, explains, the symptoms in men tend to resemble the symptoms in women. The only caveat is that, since men have less breast tissue, any lumps will likely be centred behind the nipple.
"They might find some discharge, the nipple might become rather tender and inverted, there might be some ulceration or soreness, or just a swelling of the breast or chest area," she says. "Although some men might find a lump under their arm or towards their collarbone, more often than not it's a lump around the nipple area that's the first thing that's brought to their attention."
In men, as in women, the causes of breast cancer aren't fully understood. However, there are certain risk factors that may make a diagnosis more likely. These include being aged over 60, previous radiotherapy to the chest, or unusually high oestrogen levels (which can be caused by long-term danni al fegato oppure obesità).
Genetic risk factors
Another major factor is family history. If a number of your relatives have dealt with breast cancer, you might have inherited a genetic mutation (eg in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene) that raises your own risk too. (It's worth mentioning that a man with a BRCA mutation is still less likely to develop breast cancer than the average woman, but their risk is around ten times higher than that of the average man.)
"Sometimes you'll find that men have daughters who've had breast cancer," says Priestley. "So if there have been multiple people in the family diagnosed, especially other men or younger women, that can come into play as well."
In Herbert's case, his sister had been diagnosed in 2008, and genetic testing confirmed that they both have an altered BRCA2 gene. Herbert says this prompted a lot of heartache, especially since his two children have a 50% risk of carrying the same gene fault. Unfortunately, it also increases the risk of aggressive cancro alla prostata in men, and Herbert has subsequently dealt with prostate cancer too.
"It's something you have to face up to really, but the biggest thing is getting diagnosed early," he says. "Men with the altered BRCA2 gene need to get the Test PSA as often as they can."
The psychological implications
Herbert's breast cancer treatment involved a mastectomy, followed by 18 weeks of chemotherapy, a lymph node clearance and three weeks of radiotherapy. Medically speaking, there is little difference between what men and women go through here, but he thinks the psychological burden is slightly different.
"The mastectomy is a big thing for a lady because it changes her body shape, but as a man the only time anyone would notice is when you go swimming," he says. "And then with the chemotherapy, hair loss is a big thing with ladies but I haven't got much hair anyway. The other bonus is I didn't have to shave."
While Herbert is good-humoured about the body image aspect (which, of course, affects everybody differently), he did struggle with the sense of isolation.
"When I had the mastectomy, I was in a room of my own because all the others were ladies," he says. "My sister is still friends with most of the people who were having a mastectomy at the same time as her, but I never spoke to anyone about it."
Compounding the issue, he found that every time he turned up for an appointment, the health services would assume it was his wife who was getting treated. Then there were other irritants, like the invitations to mammograms that encouraged him to wear a blouse.
It wasn't until 2014, taking part in the Breast Cancer Care fashion show, that he met another man in the same situation.
"There were two men taking part, Clive and myself, and Clive was the first man I'd spoken to who had breast cancer," he says. "It's helpful speaking to a lady but it's not the same as speaking to another guy."
Where to find support
It was for this reason that Herbert decided to volunteer for Breast Cancer Care and Breast Cancer Now’s Someone Like Me service, which matches volunteers with people seeking support. Through this service, he has spoken to a number of men with breast cancer, who might otherwise feel very alone.
Priestley points out that all of Breast Cancer Care's services are open to men as well as women, and that anybody affected by breast cancer can call the helpline free on 0808 800 6000 for information and support.
"We do get men ringing us asking questions about their breast health, so we're always there for anyone who wants to ask questions and talk through concerns," she says. "We have some information specifically tailored to men on our website, and we also have moving forward services for people who've got to the end of their treatment - I know we've had men attend that in the past. None of our services are exclusive to women."
Today, Herbert is fit and healthy. And as well as helping other men with breast cancer, he's looking to raise more awareness around the disease.
"Men don't like to go to the doctor anyway, but there's an added problem with something like this because they see it as a ladies' disease," he says. "I would say to all men that they should feel their breasts and make sure they haven't got any lumps or soreness, and if they do find anything then go to the doctor. And I think when people are talking about breast cancer they could say men and women with breast cancer, not just women, because men can get it too."
Scelte del paziente per Salute generale degli uomini

Salute degli uomini
Gli integratori di testosterone sono sicuri per gli uomini?
Gli integratori di testosterone possono avere un effetto estremamente positivo sulla vita degli uomini che ne hanno bisogno per motivi medici. Sia come trattamento per la terapia ormonale di affermazione di genere da femmina a maschio, sia per la carenza di testosterone, ci sono numerosi benefici per la salute mentale e fisica. Come con qualsiasi farmaco, è importante essere consapevoli dei possibili effetti avversi del trattamento. Ci sono anche parametri di sicurezza cruciali in atto per proteggere contro le complicazioni di salute.
di Amberley Davis

Salute degli uomini
Qual è l'altezza media degli uomini?
Come ti confronti con l'altezza media degli uomini nel tuo paese? L'altezza è stata collegata all'aspettativa di vita, alle malattie e persino al successo accademico e finanziario. Qui esploriamo cosa possono rivelare la tua altezza e la tua circonferenza vita sulla tua salute.
di Amberley Davis
Informazioni sull'autoreVisualizza il profilo completo

Abi Millar
Freelance Journalist
BA (Hons), MA
Abi è una giornalista freelance con un interesse particolare per la scrittura sulla salute e la medicina.
Informazioni sul recensoreVisualizza il profilo completo

Dr Sarah Jarvis
Consulente Clinico
MA (Cantab), BM, BCh (Oxon), DRCOG, FRCGP, MBE
Dopo aver completato la formazione in medicina a Cambridge e Oxford, la Dott.ssa Sarah Jarvis MBE è diventata un medico di base.
Storia dell'articolo
Le informazioni su questa pagina sono revisionate da clinici qualificati.
Articolo disponibile anche in Inglese, Tedesco, Spagnolo, Francese, Italiano, Portoghese, Hindi, Ebraico, Arabo, and Svedese.
27 Sept 2019 | Ultima versione

Chiedi, condividi, connettiti.
Esplora le discussioni, fai domande e condividi esperienze su centinaia di argomenti di salute.

Non ti senti bene?
Valuta i tuoi sintomi online gratuitamente
Iscriviti alla newsletter di Patient
La tua dose settimanale di consigli sulla salute chiari e affidabili - scritti per aiutarti a sentirti informato, sicuro e in controllo.
Abbonandoti accetti i nostri Informativa sulla Privacy. Puoi annullare l'iscrizione in qualsiasi momento. Non vendiamo mai i tuoi dati.
Più sulla salute degli uomini
- 9 segni di basso testosterone negli uomini
- I problemi di erezione stanno diventando più comuni nei giovani uomini?
- Gli integratori di testosterone sono sicuri per gli uomini?
- Gli uomini possono sperimentare la depressione postnatale?
- Gli uomini possono avere il mughetto?
- Cistite negli uomini
- Quanto sono affidabili i test per il cancro alla prostata?
- Quanto è comune l'infertilità maschile e quali sono le cause?
- Come prevenire l'eiaculazione precoce
- Come il tuo stile di vita può essere una causa di basso numero di spermatozoi
- Problemi del pene che non dovresti ignorare
- Opzioni di test PSA
- Il sistema riproduttivo maschile
- Quali sono i segni della depressione negli uomini?
- AggiornatoQuali sono i segni del cancro alla prostata?
- Cosa causa la calvizie maschile?
- Cos'è la mascolinità tossica e come influisce sugli uomini?
- Cosa scatena i disturbi alimentari negli uomini?
- Cosa devi sapere prima di assumere farmaci per la disfunzione erettile
- Perché la violenza sessuale contro gli uomini è in aumento?