Case report: Unraveling a unique case of male occult breast cancer with axillary intricacies and a comprehensive literature dive
Xintong Xie, Xiangyi Kong, Hongnan Jiang, Jidong Gao

TL;DR
This case report describes a rare male breast cancer case with unusual features and successful treatment involving surgery and radiotherapy.
Contribution
The paper presents the first documented case of male occult breast cancer with distant metastasis successfully treated with surgery and radiotherapy.
Findings
The patient's condition remained stable after a multidisciplinary treatment approach.
Surgical intervention was feasible after systemic therapy in a case with distant metastases.
The case highlights the complex clinical presentation and management of male occult breast cancer.
Abstract
Male breast cancer is a rare neoplasm, accounting for approximately 1% of all breast cancer cases. It typically presents as a painless, retroareolar mass. An exceedingly rare variant is male occult breast cancer, which is primarily characterized by axillary lymph node enlargement without an identifiable primary breast tumor. We report an intriguing case of a septuagenarian patient diagnosed with male occult breast cancer. The patient presented with both axillary lymph node enlargement and an associated axillary skin ulcer, and was subsequently diagnosed with male occult breast cancer with metastases to the axillary and clavicular lymph nodes, as well as more distant sites. His treatment involved a multidisciplinary approach, including HER2-targeted therapy, chemotherapy, axillary lymph node dissection, and radiotherapy. Regular follow-ups have shown that his condition remains stable.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMale Breast Health Studies · Cancer and Skin Lesions · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas
