Website for DAP Health
This story first appeared in DAP Health

“We often don’t think of those assigned male at birth as getting breast cancer, but they do. Its occurrence is smaller than in those assigned female — it happens to about one in 800 men vs. one in eight women — but breast cancer in men is a serious concern. It’s made more so by the fact that, in the vast majority of cases, breast cancer is found at a much later stage in men than in women.

To understand the biological and — almost as powerful — social factors that differentiate male breast cancer, I spoke with DAP Director of OB-GYN Services Dr. Rhett Papa…”

[Read the full interview at daphealth.org]