Paget's disease of the breast is a rare type of cancer that affects the skin of the nipple and areola.[1] The study followed 64 patients with an average age of 62.5 years who were diagnosed a median of 20 weeks after the first symptoms, but in one case it took up to 3 years.[1] In 47 patients, isolated Paget's disease was suspected, but during histopathological examination, 38 of them were found to have associated malignancy in the mammary gland.[1] Surgical treatment included minimally invasive breast surgery in 46 patients, with 17 requiring surgical revision.[1] In patients with Paget's disease associated with noninvasive breast cancer treated with sparing surgery without radiation, local recurrence occurred in 3 cases, which was significantly more than in patients who underwent total mastectomy.[1] Tumors associated with Paget's disease were mostly estrogen receptor negative and HER2 receptor positive.[1]