The main treatment for male breast cancer is surgery. The most common surgery is a mastectomy. This means removing the breast tissue and the nipple. Sometimes lymph nodes under the arm, the lining over the chest muscles, and even part of the chest wall muscles under the breast are also removed.
Other treatments that may be used include:
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy sends high-energy X-rays or beams of other particles right to the cancer cells. Radiation after surgery can kill cancer cells that may not be seen during surgery. Radiation may also be done before surgery to help shrink the tumor and make it easier to remove. It may be given along with chemotherapy. Or it may be used as a palliative treatment. This is a therapy that relieves symptoms, such as pain, but doesn't treat the disease.
Radiation therapy is usually given as external beam radiation. A large machine focuses the beams on the tumor. The machine is controlled by a radiation therapist. Special shields may be used to protect the tissue around the treatment area. Treatments are painless and often last a few minutes. Treatments are often given 5 days a week (Monday-Friday) for several weeks.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy (chemo) is the use of strong medicines to kill cancer cells. In most cases, chemo works by making the cancer cells unable to grow or divide. Different groups of medicines work in different ways to fight cancer cells. A doctor called a medical oncologist will work with you to make a treatment plan. Chemotherapy may be given before or after surgery.
Hormone therapy
In some cases, hormones can kill cancer cells, slow their growth, or stop them from growing. Hormone therapy as a cancer treatment uses medicines that affect the way certain hormones work or keep your body from making certain hormones. Before hormone therapy, your doctor will do a hormone receptor test. This lab test is done on a small piece of the cancer tissue to see if there are estrogen or progesterone receptors on the cells. A hormone receptor test can help to predict whether cancer cells are sensitive to hormones. If so, hormone therapy may be a treatment choice.
Targeted therapy
These medicines target certain proteins found on cancer cells. This limits the damage to healthy cells and can cause fewer and different side effects than chemo. Breast cancer cells are tested to see if they have a protein called HER2 on their surface. HER2 promotes cell growth, and these cancer cells tend to grow and spread quickly. There are targeted therapy medicines that attach to this protein to help stop cancer cell growth. Other targeted therapy drugs work on targets for BRCA mutations and hormone receptor positive cells.
Immunotherapy
Certain types of breast cancer can be treated with immunotherapy. This helps the body's immune system recognize and kill cancer cells. Immunotherapy may be used with chemotherapy.