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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Eleanor Fleming & Damon Wilkinson

'I'm glad I swallowed my pride and had the common sense to do something - otherwise I might not be here now'

A grandfather-of-two has told how he underwent a mastectomy after being given a shock breast cancer diagnosis. Mike Burrows is now urging men to swallow their 'pride pill' and ask for help when it comes to their health as he 'might not be sitting here now' if he had not taken action.

Just weeks after retiring last year, Mike discovered what felt like a pea-sized lump in his chest while showering. Mike, now 69, didn't do anything about it at first as he thought it might be temporary swelling – but one week later, he realised the lump was still there and decided to call his GP.

After explaining everything 'very apologetically' to the receptionist, he was booked in for an appointment with his GP the following day, and he was then referred to hospital for further examinations and a biopsy. "Prior to me going in for the biopsy, I had no idea what was going to happen," Mike, of Ashbourne, Derbyshire, said.

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"It suddenly dawned on me when I got to the door and it said 'Breast Clinic' and as I walked through the door, I was the only man there, and I thought 'I'm out of my depth here'."

Following the biopsy – where a small sample of tissue is taken for examination – Mike was informed on October 25, 2022 that he had breast cancer. According to Cancer Research UK, less than 1% of breast cancers in the UK are found in men, and Mike said he and his wife Jackie, a 62-year-old paramedic, were 'shellshocked' by the news.

"I was just staring at the floor in the consultation room," Mike explained. "I just didn’t know what to say, nothing would come out of my mouth.

"You’ve reached the age of 68, and you think that you’ve got through life fairly unscathed, and then all of a sudden, you get something like this. It took my breath away."

Mike with his wife Jackie (PA Real Life)

He then underwent a mastectomy – the surgical removal of breast tissue – on November 28, which confirmed he had Stage 2 breast cancer, followed by five sessions of radiotherapy in March, which left him feeling fatigued. While Mike has received the all clear, he feels there is a lack of awareness around male breast cancer.

However, he hopes his story will encourage more men to come forward and seek help if they notice 'something’s not right'. "The treatment I received from the NHS was absolutely fantastic," Mike said.

"They were guiding me through it; I was completely out of water, a male with breast cancer… but now, I just want to make sure that guys out there try and swallow this pride pill. It's the old thing that keeps getting put out, that men do not act on something that's wrong, they do not pick up the phone and call the doctor.

Mike is urging other men to seek help if they feel something's not right (PA Real Life)

"But if I can achieve at least one male going to the doctors and getting checked out, then that will make me so pleased because I think there are a lot of men out there who don’t act on it."

According to the NHS, breast cancer is often thought of as something that only affects women, but men can be diagnosed with the disease in rare cases. It grows in the small amount of breast tissue men have behind their nipples, and usually happens in men over the age of 60.

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Mike has been left with a scar which runs across his chest and under his right arm. He underwent five sessions of radiotherapy in March this year and was prescribed tamoxifen tablets – a hormone therapy drug to treat breast cancer.

He will have to take the tablets for the next five years. Mike said he can still feel the effects of the radiotherapy, as it 'burned the flesh inside' his chest, but he has since realised 'how lucky' he is.

"Was it luck? Or was it just common sense? I don't know," Mike said. "But I'm looking back now and I'm thinking, I'm glad I had the common sense to do something about it because, had I not, I might not be sitting here now."

Mike’s wife Jackie will be taking part in Breast Cancer Now’s Pink Ribbon Walk on July 8, where she will be walking 20 miles with a group of friends to help fund life-changing research and support.

To find out more about Breast Cancer Now’s Pink Ribbon Walk, click here.

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