Background: Male breast cancer (MBC) is a rare disease. Th is study reports
the results of a treatment including radiotherapy of a single institution.
Material and Methods:The hospital charts of 23 patients with nonmetastatic
MBC treated from 1971 to 1991 were reviewed. The tumor was located central
ly or medially in 10 patients. Tumor classification: Tis C3 n = 1, pT1 n =
2, pT2 n = 8,T2 C3 n = 1, pT3 n = 4, pT4 n = 6, unknown n = 1, cN0 n = 8, c
N+ n = 1, pN0 n = 5, pN+ n = 9. Biopsy only was performed in 2 patients, tu
morectomy in 2 patients and radical or modified radical mastectomy in 19 pa
tients. Radiotherapy was given to the chest wall (median total dose 46 Gy)
in all patients but two (who had only irradiation of the nodes) and to the
axillary//supraclavicular nodes (median total dose 48 Gy) in all patients b
ut two (who had only chest wall irradiation). In 5 patients radiation of th
e mammaria interna nodes was added to the supraclavicular field (median tot
al dose 48 Gy). 5 patients with known receptor status were treated with adj
uvant hormone therapy. Median follow-up was 62 (6-182) months. Results: 19
patients died, 15 with tumor. The median overall survival rime was 63 month
s, the disease-specific 5-year and 10-year survival rate was 69% and 35%, r
espectively. There were 3 chest wall relapses in one of two nonirradiated p
atients and in one of two only irradiated patients, respectively. Distant m
etastases occurred in 12 patients. Conclusion: This study supports adjuvant
radiotherapy for treatment of advanced male breast cancer.