Feeling the Burn: Neuropathy in Cancer Patients and
the Overlooked Burden in Male Breast Cancer
Written by: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D | Phil Hoekstra, Ph.D
This article is an original work prepared for publication exclusively for the Male Breast Cancer Global Alliance. No copyrighted
sources were reproduced or paraphrased. All content is intended for educational
purposes.
Neuropathy is one of the most common and distressing complications faced by
people undergoing cancer treatment—and one of the least adequately addressed in
routine survivorship care. Characterized by numbness, tingling, burning pain,
electric-shock sensations, temperature sensitivity, and loss of balance,
neuropathy can profoundly disrupt mobility, sleep, work, and quality of life.
While chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is widely recognized in
oncology, the experience of neuropathy in male breast cancer (MBC)
patients remains underrepresented in clinical discourse, research priorities,
and survivorship resources.

Men diagnosed with breast cancer often enter care pathways designed
primarily around female patients. As a result, side effects such as neuropathy
may be under-screened, under-discussed, and under-treated in male
survivors—despite the same exposure to neurotoxic chemotherapies, radiation,
and adjunctive therapies. Advocacy groups in male breast cancer care have
increasingly called attention to this gap, noting that lingering neuropathy
becomes a silent burden that outlasts remission and shapes long-term recovery.
Why
Does Neuropathy Happen in Cancer Care?
Neuropathy in cancer patients
arises from multiple converging mechanisms:
1) Chemotherapy Neurotoxicity
Certain chemotherapeutic agents—such as taxanes, platinum compounds, and vinca
alkaloids—directly damage peripheral nerves. These drugs interfere with axonal
transport, mitochondrial function, and myelin integrity, leading to sensory
loss and neuropathic pain that often begins in the toes and fingertips before
ascending proximally. Because nerves regenerate slowly, symptoms may persist
long after treatment ends.
2) Radiation-Induced Nerve Injury
Radiation can cause fibrosis and microvascular compromise around nerve bundles.
While breast cancer radiation targets the chest wall and axillary region,
downstream effects on autonomic regulation and microcirculation can alter
distal nerve health, contributing to sensory disturbances and cold intolerance
in the extremities.
3) Microcirculatory Injury
Cancer therapies can damage small blood vessels that nourish nerves. Reduced
perfusion deprives peripheral nerves of oxygen and nutrients, compounding neurotoxicity.
The feet—being the most distal tissues—often reveal these deficits first.
4) Inflammation and Immune Dysregulation
Targeted therapies and immunotherapies can trigger inflammatory cascades that
affect small fibers and autonomic nerves. In susceptible individuals, this
results in burning pain, hypersensitivity, and temperature dysregulation.
5) Compounding Risk Factors
Pre-existing diabetes, vitamin deficiencies, thyroid dysfunction, alcohol
exposure, and occupational neurotoxin exposure can amplify neuropathic
vulnerability—factors that may be overlooked in male breast cancer care
pathways.
Why
Male Breast Cancer Patients Are at Particular Risk
Male breast cancer patients
frequently report feeling “out of place” in oncology settings, which can discourage
proactive reporting of side effects. Neuropathy may be normalized as “expected
discomfort” rather than recognized as a treatable condition. Additionally, men
may delay reporting sensory changes until functional impairment—falls, gait
instability, or sleep disruption—becomes unavoidable. This delay narrows the
window for early intervention.
Furthermore, MBC survivors may lack access to gender-specific survivorship
education and peer support where neuropathy management strategies are shared.
The result is an unmet clinical demand: to screen, detect, identify,
and treat neuropathy earlier and more systematically in men with breast cancer.
Screening
and Detection: Moving Beyond Symptom Checklists
Traditional neuropathy screening
relies heavily on patient-reported symptoms and bedside exams. While essential,
these approaches can miss early physiologic changes. Modern survivorship care
benefits from combining subjective reporting with functional and
imaging-based tools:
·
Quantitative sensory testing to
track vibration and thermal thresholds
·
Nerve conduction studies to
evaluate large-fiber involvement
·
Thermal imaging to visualize
microcirculatory and autonomic changes associated with neuropathic stress
patterns in the feet and hands
·
Gait and balance assessments to
identify functional risk
Thermal imaging, in particular, offers a non-invasive way to detect
asymmetric temperature patterns and distal perfusion changes that often
accompany neuropathic dysfunction. While not a standalone diagnostic, it
complements neurologic testing by revealing functional changes that may precede
overt nerve conduction abnormalities.
Standard
Solutions for Managing Cancer-Related Neuropathy
There is no single cure for CIPN,
but a multimodal management strategy can significantly reduce
suffering:
Pharmacologic Options
·
Neuropathic
pain agents (e.g., duloxetine)
·
Topical analgesics for focal pain
·
Careful medication review to avoid neurotoxic
overlaps
Rehabilitation and Physical Therapy·
Balance training and proprioceptive exercises
·
Gait stabilization and fall-prevention programs
·
Strength training to reduce compensatory injury
Lifestyle and Supportive Interventions
·
Foot protection and proper footwear to prevent
unnoticed injury
·
Nutritional assessment (B vitamins, metabolic
support)
·
Sleep and pain hygiene strategies
Adjunctive Non-Invasive Modalities
·
Neuromodulation techniques
·
Image-guided monitoring of extremity health to
track response to interventions
·
Education on daily foot checks to catch early
skin or sensory changes
Neuropathy and Dermatomal Mapping
Peripheral neuropathy and radiculopathy often produce burning, tingling, or electric pain in specific distributions. Thermography can visualize these patterns along dermatomes—the “wiring diagram” of the skin mapped to spinal nerve roots. Dr. Hoekstra describes how thermal gradients trace neuropathic pathways, helping localize nerve impingement in the spine or peripheral nerves in the limbs. When combined with autonomic challenge testing, clinicians can differentiate acute inflammatory phases (often warmer) from chronic ischemic or denervated phases (often cooler).
This capability is especially valuable in pain management and personal injury contexts, where objective documentation of nerve-related dysfunction supports diagnosis, treatment planning, and medico-legal clarity.
The
Case for Proactive Neuropathy Care in MBC Survivorship
For male breast cancer survivors,
neuropathy is not merely a side effect—it is a quality-of-life determinant.
Persistent numbness or burning pain undermines confidence in walking, returning
to work, and re-engaging in daily life. When neuropathy is under-identified,
survivors feel unseen; when it is proactively addressed, recovery becomes
tangible.
Elevating neuropathy screening within male breast cancer survivorship
reframes care from survival alone to functional restoration.
By integrating early detection tools, imaging-informed surveillance, and
multidisciplinary treatment pathways, clinicians can move from reactive pain
management to proactive nerve protection. In doing so, the cancer community
honors a simple truth voiced by patients themselves: relief from neuropathy is
not optional—it is essential to healing.
Part 2
—
A Diagnostic Perspective on
Neuropathy in Cancer Care
By: Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM,
FASLMS
From a diagnostic imaging perspective,
neuropathy in cancer patients is not a mysterious side effect—it is a
predictable consequence of how modern oncology therapies interact with nerve
biology, microcirculation, and tissue metabolism. Peripheral nerves are
uniquely vulnerable structures. They rely on uninterrupted blood supply, intact
mitochondrial function, and stable axonal transport to maintain sensory and
motor signaling over long distances. Cancer treatments disrupt each of these
systems in different ways, which explains why neuropathy often emerges first in
the feet and hands.
Chemotherapeutic agents are designed to target
rapidly dividing cells, but many also interfere with microtubule dynamics and
mitochondrial integrity within neurons. This impairs axonal transport—the
cellular “highway” that delivers nutrients and signaling molecules along nerve
fibers. When transport fails, distal segments of long nerves become
metabolically deprived, producing the classic stocking-and-glove distribution
of numbness, burning pain, and temperature sensitivity. In parallel,
treatment-related injury to the small vessels that nourish nerves reduces
oxygen delivery, compounding neural stress in the most distal tissues.

Radiation therapy introduces a different
pathway to neuropathy. By inducing endothelial injury and fibrotic change
within irradiated fields and adjacent neurovascular bundles, radiation alters vascular
regulation and autonomic signaling. Even when radiation is localized to the
chest wall or axilla in breast cancer care, downstream effects on autonomic
tone can influence distal circulation and nerve health. Over time, this
dysregulation manifests as altered temperature control, color changes, edema,
and sensory disturbances in the extremities.
Imaging provides a unique window into these
processes because neuropathy is not solely a neural problem—it is a
neurovascular and metabolic disorder with structural and functional signatures.
High-resolution ultrasound can visualize peripheral nerves, revealing
enlargement, altered echotexture, and perineural edema associated with
inflammatory or compressive neuropathies. Doppler ultrasound adds physiologic context
by assessing regional blood flow, highlighting areas of microcirculatory
compromise that parallel sensory symptoms. When nerve irritation coexists with
ischemic stress, imaging helps distinguish primary neural pathology from
secondary vascular contributors—an important distinction for targeted
intervention.
Functional imaging modalities further extend
diagnostic insight. Thermal imaging, for example, visualizes patterns of
cutaneous temperature regulation that reflect autonomic control of microcirculation.
In neuropathic states, asymmetry, distal cooling, or focal hotspots often
parallel patient-reported burning or numbness. While not a standalone
diagnostic tool, thermal imaging complements neurologic testing by revealing
functional dysregulation that may precede structural nerve changes detectable
by conduction studies. This functional perspective is particularly valuable in
early survivorship, when symptoms are evolving and intervention windows are
still open.
Imaging also supports longitudinal care.
Neuropathy in cancer patients is dynamic: symptoms may worsen during therapy,
plateau, or slowly recover afterward. Serial imaging—tracking nerve morphology,
regional perfusion, and functional temperature patterns—provides objective
markers of change over time. These markers inform clinical decisions about dose
modification, rehabilitation strategies, protective footwear, and referral
timing to neurology or pain management. In male breast cancer survivorship,
where neuropathy may be underreported, objective imaging evidence helps
validate patient experience and accelerates appropriate care pathways.

From a broader diagnostic standpoint,
neuropathy rarely exists in isolation. Imaging frequently reveals concurrent
contributors such as spinal degenerative changes, entrapment neuropathies, or
vascular insufficiency that magnify treatment-related nerve injury. By
integrating peripheral nerve imaging with regional vascular assessment,
clinicians can address layered pathology rather than treating neuropathy as a single-cause
phenomenon. This integrative approach aligns with precision
survivorship—tailoring interventions to the dominant drivers of nerve
dysfunction in each patient.
Ultimately, the value of imaging in
cancer-related neuropathy lies in its ability to translate subjective symptoms
into objective, trackable physiology. When patients say their feet burn, go
numb, or feel “disconnected,” imaging provides clinicians with a map of where
neurovascular stress is occurring and how it changes with time and therapy.
This diagnostic clarity reframes neuropathy from an inevitable side effect to a
monitorable condition—one that can be detected earlier, managed more precisely,
and mitigated before it becomes a permanent barrier to recovery and quality of
life.
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