If you have noticed a sore inside your mouth that has been there for more than two or three weeks, or a white patch that simply refuses to go away, it is natural to feel worried. Most of the time, small mouth ulcers heal on their own within a week or two. But when they do not, your body may be trying to tell you something worth paying attention to.
Oral cavity cancer refers to cancer that starts inside the mouth, including the tongue, gums, inner cheeks, lips, floor of the mouth, and the roof of the mouth. It is one of the most common cancers in India, largely because of the widespread habit of tobacco and betel nut use. The good news is that when it is found early, oral cavity cancer is very treatable.
The oral cavity is simply your mouth. It includes everything from your lips to the back of your throat where the mouth ends and the throat begins. This area includes:
Any of these areas can develop cancer if the cells in that region start growing in an abnormal and uncontrolled way.
Healthy cells in your mouth grow, do their job, and are replaced by new cells in an orderly way. Cancer happens when some of these cells develop changes in their DNA that cause them to grow out of control. Over time, these abnormal cells form a lump or sore that does not behave like normal tissue.
In the mouth, this process is almost always linked to long-term irritation or damage to the cells from tobacco, gutka, betel nut, alcohol, or a virus called HPV. Years of this kind of damage slowly changes how cells behave, which is why oral cavity cancer mostly affects people above 35 to 40 years of age.
Yes. Oral cavity cancer caught at an early stage has a very high cure rate. Many patients treated in Stage 1 or Stage 2 go on to live normal lives after treatment. Even in more advanced stages, modern treatment combining surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy has made a significant difference in outcomes. This is exactly why you should not delay a consultation if something inside your mouth looks or feels unusual.
The most important thing to remember is that early oral cavity cancer is usually painless. Many people wait because they think, "It does not hurt, so it cannot be serious." That thinking can lead to delays. Here is what to watch for:
An ulcer that has been present for more than two to three weeks without healing is the most important warning sign. This is different from the common small painful ulcers most people get, which heal within 7 to 10 days on their own.
White patches inside the mouth are called leukoplakia. Red patches are called erythroplakia. Both can be pre-cancerous changes. Red patches carry a higher risk. Neither of these causes pain in early stages, so they are easy to miss unless you look carefully or a dentist notices them during a routine check.
As a tumour grows, it can cause pain or discomfort when you eat, chew, or swallow. Some people notice that certain foods hurt or that swallowing feels different from usual. This symptom, especially when combined with a visible sore or patch, needs immediate evaluation.
If you have been a long term tobacco or betel nut user and you notice even one of these signs, please do not wait. An oral cancer screening in Chennai can help you know exactly what is going on.
Understanding what causes oral cavity cancer helps you see why certain habits matter so much. Here are the main risk factors:
The first step is a thorough examination of the mouth, tongue, throat, and neck by an experienced head and neck specialist. An experienced clinician can often identify suspicious areas on visual inspection alone. This is why oral cancer screening in Chennai is simple and does not involve complicated procedures at the first visit.
If a suspicious area is found, a small piece of tissue is taken and examined under a microscope. This is called a biopsy. It is the only way to confirm cancer. The procedure is done under local anaesthesia and takes only a few minutes. A biopsy report will clearly say whether the tissue is cancerous, pre-cancerous, or normal.
Once cancer is confirmed, imaging tests are used to understand the exact size of the tumour, whether the jaw or neck lymph nodes are involved, and whether the cancer has spread elsewhere in the body. These scans are painless and take less than an hour each.
The difference between Stage 1 and Stage 4 is often just a matter of months of delay. A small painless ulcer in Stage 1 requires a short surgery and possibly radiation. The same cancer in Stage 4 requires extensive treatment and carries a harder recovery. Early diagnosis is not a medical concept, it is a life changing decision you make for yourself and your family.
Treatment for oral cavity cancer depends on the stage, the location of the tumour, and your overall health. Most patients need a combination of treatments, and all decisions are made carefully based on what gives the best result with the least impact on your quality of life.
Surgery is the primary treatment for most oral cavity cancers. The goal is to remove the entire tumour along with a small margin of healthy tissue around it to ensure no cancer cells are left behind. For small tumours, this can often be done through the mouth. For larger tumours, an external approach may be needed.
Modern surgical techniques are designed to preserve as much function as possible, meaning the aim is always to let you speak, eat, and swallow as normally as you can after surgery.
If cancer has spread to the lymph nodes in the neck, or if there is a significant risk it may have spread, a neck dissection is performed at the same time as the primary surgery. This involves removing the affected lymph nodes. It is a routine part of oral cancer surgery and does not add significantly to recovery time.
When a larger portion of the mouth or jaw is removed, reconstruction is needed to restore both appearance and function. This is done using tissue from another part of the body, most commonly from the forearm or the thigh, in a procedure called a free flap reconstruction. The reconstructed area allows patients to eat, speak, and smile again. Reconstruction is a specialised area and is done as part of the same surgical session wherever possible.
Radiation uses high energy beams to destroy cancer cells. It is often used after surgery to kill any remaining microscopic cancer cells in the area. In some cases, where surgery is not the best option, radiation can be used as the primary treatment. Modern radiation techniques are far more precise than older methods and aim to protect the surrounding healthy tissue.
Chemotherapy uses medicines to destroy cancer cells. In oral cavity cancer, it is most often given alongside radiation (a combination called chemoradiation) rather than on its own. It makes radiation more effective, particularly in more advanced cases. Your oncologist will decide whether chemotherapy is needed based on the stage and type of cancer.
Some oral cancers express a protein called EGFR on their surface. In these cases, a targeted therapy drug called cetuximab can be used either with radiation or as part of a broader treatment plan. Targeted therapy attacks cancer cells more specifically than chemotherapy and is associated with different side effects.
At a good cancer centre, your care is not managed by just one doctor. A team of specialists including a surgical oncologist, radiation oncologist, medical oncologist, speech therapist, dietitian, and reconstructive surgeon work together on your case. This team approach ensures that every aspect of your treatment and recovery is coordinated from the beginning.
The cost of oral cavity cancer treatment in Chennai varies based on several factors. Understanding these in advance helps families plan without added stress.
The stage of the cancer at the time of diagnosis has the biggest influence on cost. Early stage cancers often require a single modality of treatment, such as surgery alone, while advanced cancers may require surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy.
Other factors include the extent of surgery and whether reconstruction is needed, the number of radiation sessions, whether the treatment is done at a government or private hospital, the type of room chosen during hospitalisation, and whether targeted therapy drugs are needed.
If you have health insurance, many aspects of cancer treatment are now covered under major policies, including surgical procedures, chemotherapy, and radiation. At the time of consultation, the team can provide a realistic estimate of what the treatment plan will involve.
Recovery after oral cavity cancer treatment is a process, and it takes time. But most patients do return to a good quality of life with the right support and follow up.
Dr. Senthil is a specialised surgical oncologist with focused experience in oral and head and neck cancers. Oral cavity cancer surgery requires technical precision, an understanding of how to balance cancer clearance with preserving function, and experience in managing the variations that come with each patient's anatomy and disease stage. This experience matters when it comes to the decisions made in the operating room.
One of the key aspects of Dr. Senthil's approach is a focus on functional recovery alongside cancer control. Reconstruction after oral cancer surgery is complex, and the goal is always to ensure that patients can speak, eat, and live as normally as possible after treatment. Patients are supported through every stage of recovery, from surgery through to speech and nutritional rehabilitation.