Oral Cancer

Oral cancer can affect any part of the mouth. Most oral cancers begin in the flat cells that cover the surfaces of your mouth, tongue, and lips. Anyone can get oral cancer, but the risk is higher if you are male and have the habit of eating tobacco, alcohol abuse, have HPV, or have a history of head or neck cancer. Frequent exposure to the sun may cause you lip cancer. Diagnosing oral cancer includes physical examination, endoscopy, biopsy, and imaging tests. Oral cancer treatments may include surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Some patients have a combination of treatments.

  • Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy
  • Pathology and molecular biology of oral cancer
  • Chemotherapy of oral cancer and its side effects
  • Oral epidemiology and risk factors
  • Complications of oral cancer treatment, prevention and management
  • Prosthetic reconstruction for oral cancer patients using dental implants

Related Conference of Oral Cancer

June 11-12, 2026

27th Annual World Congress on Pediatrics

Barcelona, Spain
June 22-23, 2026

35th World Congress on Clinical Pediatrics

Barcelona, Spain
June 29-30, 2026

6th Global Summit on Pediatric Nursing

Barcelona, Spain
July 27-28, 2026

3rd World Pediatric Conference

London, UK
August 18-19, 2026

8th World Pediatric Infectious Disease Congress

Paris, France
September 07-08, 2026

24rd World Congress on Clinical Pediatrics

Toronto, Canada
September 14-15, 2026

26th Annual Congress on Pediatrics & Neonatology

Rome, Italy
November 19-20, 2026

37th European Pediatrics Conference

Dubai, UAE

Oral Cancer Conference Speakers

    Recommended Sessions

    Related Journals

    Are you interested in