Tom Dorchak never thought about breast cancer, even after he felt something under his skin earlier this year.
“It was the farthest thing from my mind,” the 54-year-old Brownstown father of three said. “I thought it was just a cyst.”
Dorchak mentioned the lump during a routine exam by his doctor. That was Monday, Sept. 15.
By Tuesday night, he had the bad news.
Dorchak is one of about 2,030 men in the United States who will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year.
The next two weeks were a blur of medical tests, including a bone scan and “embarrassing” mammogram.
On Sept. 26, Dr. Patti Ann Stefanick removed Dorchak’s right breast, along with much of his chest muscle and nearby glands called lymph nodes.
Cancer cells were found in
13 lymph nodes.
“They hope they got everything,” Dorchak said.
He will next see a medical oncologist to map out plans for radiation and chemotherapy.
Although breast cancer strikes women about 100 times as often as men in this country, Stefanick said she’s seen three cases in men this summer.
Because men aren’t looking for them, tumors often are larger in men before they seek treatment, she said, urging men to know what to watch for.
“It’s the same as women,” Stefanick said.
“The breast has a lump. Usually it is a painless lump, but sometimes there is bleeding. They need to go show their doctor.”
Dorchak echoed her advice.
He has been a health-care worker for 16 years, but never thought about getting breast cancer.
He currently works as a technician in Memorial Medical Center’s emergency department.
“You have to get checked,” he said.
“Most men don’t realize that this even occurs. That’s the scary part. By the time they find out, it’s usually too late.”
Dorchak has diabetes, but considers himself otherwise healthy. He had no other symptoms of cancer.
He said his co-workers and the staff at Stefanick’s office have been supportive and helpful, and he credits his family with carrying him through the emotional ordeal.
He and his wife, Denise, have a daughter, Katie, at home and two sons, Andrew and Thomas Jr., who live in the Pittsburgh area.
“The hardest thing about this whole experience was telling my children,” Dorchak said.
Breast Cancer
Johnstown man got surprise of his life
- Breast Cancer
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‘We have all survived’: Cessna family copes with multiple diagnoses of breast cancer
When her daughter called last spring, it was bad news that Belva K. Mock hoped she would never receive again.
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After working for 10 years at premier military hospitals in major metropolitan areas, Heather Johnston is embracing the different world she has found as a physician assistant at Joyce Murtha Breast Care Center in Windber.
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Breast cancer survivor discovers new lease and outlook on life
Now that she has survived breast cancer, Carrie Spinos of Richland Township wants to experience life more.
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As Christmas of 2010 approached, all seemed well in Annette Hines-McFadden’s world.
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Woman who faced breast cancer twice looks for silver lining
Three times, Rose (Murphy) Williams, 60, of Carrolltown had to give the love of her life bad news about cancer.
The first two times she had to tell her husband, Blaine, that she had breast cancer.
Then last year, she had to tell him he had esophageal cancer. -
‘I was lucky to find it early’: Mom discovers lump after losing daughter to cancer
Barely 18 months after her youngest daughter died from breast cancer, 76-year-old Patricia Barefoot discovered a lump on her own breast.
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Angling for a cure: Indiana County woman finds fly-fishing program therapeutic
Dorothy Klyap of Indiana County is fishing for women just like her.
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‘I have too much to live for’: Johnstown woman stresses importance of second opinions
Tammy Stuver is a person on the go who wasn’t about to let breast cancer keep her down for long.
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Family, friends help cancer patient cope
Jean E. Andrews of Old Conemaugh Borough has lived in the Johnstown area all of her 58 years.
Andrews, a breast cancer survivor, said it was the long-term relationships she formed in her life that got her through her ordeal with cancer. -
‘Nobody could have been more shocked’
Donald C. Shaffer knew there was something wrong.
The changes he was noticing around his nipple were becoming more painful.
His family doctor had examined the hard lumps a few weeks earlier, but the pain was not going away.
That was in the spring of 2010. - More Breast Cancer Headlines
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