ecancermedicalscience

Case Report

Synchronous bilateral breast cancer in a male

4 Dec 2013
María Caridad Rubio Hernández, Yenia Ivet Díaz Prado, Suanly Rodríguez Pérez, Ronald Rodríguez Díaz, Zaili Gutiérrez Aleaga

Male breast cancer, which represents only 1% of all breast cancers, is occasionally associated with a family history of breast cancer. Sporadic male breast cancers presenting with another primary breast cancer are extremely rare. In this article, we report on a 70-year-old male patient with bilateral multifocal and synchronous breast cancer and without a family history of breast cancer.

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