Paget's disease of the breast is a symptom of underlying breast cancer. Treatment is variable and is determined by the type of breast cancer in addition to its staging and prognostic considerations. Management often involves a
lumpectomy or
mastectomy to surgically remove the tumour.
Chemotherapy and/or
radiotherapy may also be necessary. Patients with Paget's disease of the breast that has not spread beyond the nipple are often treated with breast-conserving surgery: removal of the cancerous area of the nipple and areola, but conservation of the rest of the breast. Patients then usually undergo
radiation therapy after surgery as an adjuvant treatment to prevent recurrence. In most cases,
adjuvant treatment is part of the treatment schema. Adjuvant therapy is given to patients with cancer as a secondary form of treatment to minimize the risk of recurrence by targeting undetectable metastases. Whether adjuvant therapy is needed depends upon the type of cancer and its staging. In Paget's disease of the breast, the most common type of adjuvant therapy is radiation following breast-conservative surgery as discussed above. Paget's disease of the breast with underlying breast cancer is primarily treated with mastectomy. In cases of invasive cancer, radical mastectomy is performed: removal of the breast, the lining over the chest muscles, and affected
lymph nodes from under the
arm. In cases of noninvasive cancers, simple mastectomy are performed in which only the breast with the lining over the chest muscles is removed. ==Prognosis==