Dr. Satish Rao

Laser for Oral Cancer

Laser treatment for oral cancers is a minimally invasive surgical approach that uses focused high-energy light beams to precisely remove cancerous and precancerous tissue from the mouth.​

Overview

Laser treatment for oral cancers is a minimally invasive surgical approach that uses focused high-energy light beams to precisely remove cancerous and precancerous tissue from the mouth. It is used to treat early-stage lesions of the tongue, cheek lining, floor of mouth, lips, and gums, with significantly less bleeding, faster healing, and better functional preservation than conventional open surgery. Laser surgery is also used to treat precancerous conditions such as leukoplakia and erythroplakia before they progress to invasive cancer. Early intervention with laser treatment can significantly improve outcomes, preserve speech and swallowing, and enhance quality of life.

What Is Laser Treatment for Oral Cancers?

Laser treatment for oral cancers uses a highly focused beam of light, most commonly the CO2 (carbon dioxide) laser to vaporise, cut, or coagulate abnormal tissue with sub- millimetre precision. Unlike a conventional scalpel, the laser seals blood vessels as it cuts, reducing intraoperative bleeding and the risk of tumour cell seeding into the wound. It can be delivered through the mouth without external incisions, making it particularly suited to accessible oral cavity lesions. Laser surgery is most effective for early-stage (T1 and T2) oral cancers and for precancerous lesions requiring excision before malignant transformation occurs.

What Are the Symptoms That Indicate the Need for Laser Treatment in Oral Lesions?

Laser treatment is considered when suspicious oral lesions are identified, either as precancerous conditions or early-stage cancers. Recognising these signs early enables timely intervention before disease advances.

Symptoms and indications include:

What Are the Causes and Risk Factors for Oral Lesions Requiring Laser Treatment?

Understanding the risk factors that lead to precancerous and early cancerous oral lesions helps direct both prevention and timely detection:

Tobacco and Betel Nut Use

Smokeless tobacco, gutkha, khaini, and areca nut are the dominant causes of leukoplakia, oral submucous fibrosis, and early oral cancers in India, making them the most important modifiable risk factors.

Alcohol consumption

Heavy alcohol use damages the oral mucosal lining and acts synergistically with tobacco, significantly amplifying carcinogenic risk.

HPV infection

Human Papillomavirus (HPV-16 and HPV-18) contributes to oral mucosal dysplasia and certain early oral cancers, particularly in younger patients without a tobacco history.

Poor Oral Hygiene and Chronic Irritation

Broken teeth, ill-fitting dentures, and persistent mucosal trauma create areas of chronic low- grade injury that over time may progress to precancerous change.

How Is the Need for Laser Treatment Diagnosed?

Accurate assessment determines whether laser excision is appropriate or whether conventional surgery, radiation, or systemic therapy is required

Clinical examination

Detailed inspection and palpation of all mucosal surfaces, tongue, cheeks, floor of mouth, lips, and palate, including assessment of lesion size, borders, and texture

Biopsy

Tissue confirmation is mandatory before any treatment, an incisional biopsy determines whether the lesion is reactive, dysplastic, or invasive carcinoma

Imaging tests

Ultrasound, MRI, or CT assesses depth of invasion and lymph node status for confirmed cancers

Staging

The AJCC TNM system classifies confirmed cancers, laser surgery is appropriate primarily for T1 and T2 lesions with no nodal involvement

Frequently Asked Questions

Is laser treatment painful?

Laser excision is performed under local or general anaesthesia and is not painful during the procedure. Post-operative discomfort is mild, significantly less than conventional open surgery, and is managed with standard analgesics.

Most laser wounds in the oral cavity heal within two to four weeks. Healing is generally faster and less painful than conventional incisions.

For early-stage (T1 and T2, N0) oral cancers, laser excision with clear margins is a curative treatment in the majority of cases.

Laser surgery causes minimal disruption to surrounding structures, and most patients maintain near-normal speech and swallowing after early-stage oral cancer laser excision, particularly when compared with open surgery.

Yes. Laser surgery is a first-line treatment for leukoplakia, erythroplakia, and oral submucous fibrosis, removing high-risk tissue before it transforms into invasive cancer.

Outcomes and Survival Rates

Laser excision for early-stage oral cancers (T1 and T2, N0) achieves local control rates comparable to conventional surgery, with five-year survival rates of 75–85% for appropriately selected patients, according to published data in the oral oncology literature. The functional advantages are significant. Patients treated with laser surgery preserve better speech, swallowing, and mouth opening than those undergoing open resection for equivalent-sized tumours. For precancerous lesions, laser surgery eliminates the dysplastic tissue and halts progression to invasive cancer in the majority of cases, provided that tobacco and betel nut use is discontinued. Regular follow-up is essential, as new lesions can develop in the wider oral mucosa in patients who continue to use tobacco.

Why Choose Dr. Satish Rao for Oral Cancer Treatment?

Treated Cancer Patients
1000 +
Complex Surgeries
800 +

Together, We Can Fight Against Cancer

Start your journey towards recovery today. Contact us via phone or fill out our appointment form to schedule a consultation with Dr. Satish Rao.

Dr Satish Rao
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