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Atypical ductal hyperplasia in men with gynecomastia: what is their breast cancer risk?

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Coopey, Suzanne B.
Li, Clara
Yala, Adam
Barzilay, Regina
Faulkner, Heather R.
King, Tari A.
Acevedo, Francisco
Garber, Judy E.
Guidi, Anthony J.
Hughes, Kevin S.

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Purpose Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) significantly increases the risk of breast cancer in women. However, little is known about the implications of ADH in men.Methods Review of 932 males with breast pathology was performed to identify cases of ADH. Patients were excluded if ADH was upgraded to cancer on excision, or if they had contralateral breast cancer. Cases were reviewed to determine whether any male with ADH developed breast cancer.ResultsNineteen males were diagnosed with ADH from June 2003 to September 2018. All had gynecomastia. Surgical procedure was mastectomy in 8 patients and excision/reduction in 11. One patient had their nipple areola complex removed, and 1 required a free nipple graft. Median patient age at ADH diagnosis was 25years (range 18-72years). of the 14 patients with bilateral gynecomastia, 10 had bilateral ADH and 4 had unilateral. Five cases of ADH were described as severe, bordering on ductal carcinoma in situ. No patient reported a family history of breast cancer. No patient took tamoxifen. At a mean follow-up of 75months (range 4-185months), no patient developed breast cancer.Conclusion Our study is the first to provide follow-up information for males with ADH. With 6years of mean follow-up, no male in our series has developed breast cancer. This suggests that either ADH in men does not pose the same risk as ADH in women or that surgical excision of symptomatic gynecomastia in men effectively reduces the risk of breast cancer.

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Springer

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Oncology

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Breast Cancer Research and Treatment

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10.1007/s10549-018-05117-4

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