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Community Corner

Men Get Breast Cancer, Too

Although breast cancer is much less common among men than women, either gender can develop the disease.

Allen Wilson doesn’t mind being a poster child for a pink cause.

“Exploit me,” he said.

Wilson was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2003 when he was 51. Now, he’s using his experience to save other grandfathers, fathers, sons, brothers and uncles.

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Wilson, of Houston, noticed a lump under his nipple, but he ignored it until the day he collided with one of his sons while playing basketball. He did some research and decided he needed to see his doctor.

“Two days later, I had a mammogram,” he said. “It’s amazing what those technicians can do with so little tissue to work with.”

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Men are also susceptible to breast cancer, although cases are rare.

According to John Kiluk, assistant member of the Don and Erika Wallace Comprehensive Breast Program at , about 2,140 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in men in 2011, and about 450 men will die from breast cancer. Breast cancer is about 100 times less common among men than among women. Moffitt sees about five new male breast cancer cases a year.

“We do not know exactly what causes breast cancer in men or women,” Kiluk said. “However, the risk of breast cancer in men increases with age, family history of the disease, heavy drinking and obesity.”

Some argue the survival rate for men is not as good as it is for women because men tend to ignore symptoms for longer, but the American Cancer Society reports recent studies have shown some improvement. Men and women who are diagnosed at the same stages have similar outlooks.

Wilson had a mastectomy and chemotherapy. His hair was falling out, so his two sons helped give him a Mohawk and paint half red and half green for a family Christmas card.

Since then, Wilson, who is the 2011 chairman for the Houston Komen Race for the Cure®, has personally raised more than $68,000 for the foundation. A runner, a skydiver and a mountain climber, Wilson loves to leave pink ribbons on mountain summits—like Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Everest.

“I have had two surgeries, two chemos and one radiation, and I am surviving just fine,” he said, adding some of his treatments were rough, and the side effects weren’t fun. “But we got through it.”

Richard Roundtree, an actor best known as the title character in “Shaft,” was 51 when he was diagnosed with breast cancer after feeling a lump while in the shower in 1993.

Roundtree said he initially thought the doctor was questioning his manhood, but he has grown to be comfortable as a spokesman for the cause. A woman on an airplane once thanked him for saving her husband’s life by inspiring him to get checked out by a doctor.

“The most important thing a man can do is be his own advocate,” Kiluk said. “No one knows his body better, and every man should be vigilant when it comes to his own health. Don’t be afraid to consult your doctor and ask questions.”

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