Early detection is key to fighting oral cancer
7/17/2005 Middleton, PA Jo Ciavaglia Bucks County Courier Times The mouth pain was so easily ignored that Jerold Wilck doesn't remember when he first noticed it. He saw the sore, but figured he had bitten his tongue. Weeks passed; the sore didn't heal. Strange, Wilck thought. As a longtime dentist, he knew oral abnormalities are fairly rare and usually are nothing troubling. Colleagues looked at his mouth, and none suspected a problem. "That is what happens with most people," he said. It's the reason most people with oral cancer die. Wilck could have been one of them, but a doctor in his Middletown dental practice suggested he get a biopsy. Now, he's spreading the word about the importance of early detection of this common, yet often ignored, cancer. An oral cancer screen should be part of every routine dentist visit, he and other medical experts say. Every year, 30,000 new cases of oral cancer are diagnosed - more cases than leukemia and cancers of the stomach, pancreas and kidney. At 8,000 deaths a year, oral cancer kills more people than melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer. If caught early, as Wilck's was, the survival rate is 80 percent to 90 percent, according to the Oral Cancer Foundation, based in Newport Beach, Calif. But about 75 percent of oral cancers are diagnosed in the advance stages - a year or two after the symptoms are noticed. By that time, survival rates drop to less than 20 percent. "It's much [...]