Minogue’s management company said the 36-year-old’s diagnosis was confirmed this week during a visit to the southern Australian city of Melbourne, her hometown.

“Whilst at home in Melbourne with her family this week prior to her Australian Showgirl Tour, Kylie was diagnosed with early breast cancer,” the statement said. “She will undergo immediate treatment and consequently her Australian tour will not be able to proceed as planned.”

In the statement, Minogue said: “I was so looking forward to bringing the Showgirl tour to Australian audiences, and am sorry to have to disappoint my fans. Nevertheless, hopefully all will work out fine and I’ll be back with you all again soon.”

Dr. Helen Zorbis, director of Australia’s National Cancer Council, said that Minogue most likely would undergo surgery to remove a cancerous lump.

“She will be offered surgery as the first treatment I would think,” Zorbis, who is not treating Minogue, told Australia’s Sky News. Surgery could be followed by radiotherapy or chemotherapy, she added.

Minogue had concerts booked in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth over the next month as part of her Showgirl world tour. She also had shows scheduled in Singapore on June 17 and Hong Kong on June 23.

Michael Gudinski, head of Frontier Touring, the company promoting her Australian tour, said it was “way too early to tell” when Minogue might resume her tour and that it was appropriate to postpone the tour indefinitely to “let her find her space and deal with it.”

“I’m just hoping and praying because the doctors found it so early that everything will be OK,” he told Australia’s Seven television network.

“Our thoughts and I’m sure many, many legions of Kylie fans will be with her all the way,” he said. Minogue made her name as a star of the long-running Australian soap opera Neighbours before launching her singing career with hits such as “I Should Be So Lucky” and “Better the Devil You Know.”

Her popularity soared after her critically acclaimed 2001 album Fever which reached No. 1 in charts around the world and No. 3 in the Billboard album chart, and a series of raunchy video clips released with singles such as “Can’t Get You Out of My Head.”

Fever sold more than 3 million copies worldwide, according to Minogue’s Web site.

In late 2003 her song “Slow” became Minogue’s seventh No. 1 single in Britain, 15 years and nine months after “I Should Be So Lucky” topped the charts there in 1988 for her first No. 1 hit. “Slow” also was nominated for a Grammy.

In the past, Minogue has auctioned one of her bras to raise money for breast cancer research and worked to raise awareness of prostate cancer, after her father was diagnosed with it.

Australian singer Delta Goodrem, who followed in Minogue’s footsteps from Neighbors to pop stardom, was diagnosed in 2003 with Hodgkins disease, a form of lymphatic cancer.

Tuesday’s announcement came just days after an exhibition started at Australia’s National Portrait Gallery in Canberra dedicated to the mostly skimpy costumes Minogue wore in her video clips, including a pair of ultra-small gold hotpants she donned for the video of “Spinning Around.”

The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper last Friday carried a large front-page picture of the hot pants and a story quoting the gallery’s director Andrew Sayers as saying: “Whether you like Kylie’s music or not … she is a great Australian who has been at the top of her field for 20 years.”