"When I found that lump, I called my doctor. The diagnosis was Stage 2 invasive ductal carcinoma, the most common type of breast cancer. Except I'm a man. And that made it rare.” - Richard
This Men's Health Month, we're sharing an important message from our friend, marathon enthusiast, and male breast cancer survivor Richard. In 2024, after dismissing initial symptoms (a flattened nipple and a cyst), Richard found a lump and called his doctor. He received his official diagnosis and a treatment plan: chemotherapy followed by surgery and radiation. Still, he wanted to continue exploring his options and found that he was eligible to participate in a clinical trial at his treatment center. He recalls:
"I became participant number nine [in the clinical trial], and that decision gave me clarity, direction, and purpose. I wasn't just benefiting from the research. I became the research. It turned my breast cancer nightmare into an adventure, and it gave me something else, too. It gave me the chance to live a normal life during treatment. I kept running, even completing four marathons during treatment.
Breast cancer in men is rare. Roughly 1% of all breast cancer cases. Most men don't even know they can get it and wait too long to be checked. Awareness is needed to save these men's lives, like it's saving mine."