Oral cancer is largely preventable, and when caught early, it responds well to treatment.
Each May, Brazil turns its attention to a disease that hides in plain sight — oral cancer, which often announces itself only after it has already taken hold. The national awareness campaign, anchored to May 31st's twin observances of World No Tobacco Day and National Oral Cancer Prevention Day, carries a message as old as medicine itself: what is caught early can be healed, and what is ignored tends to deepen. In a country where tobacco and alcohol remain widespread, the campaign asks citizens to do something quietly radical — to listen to their own bodies before the body is forced to shout.
- Oral cancer frequently goes undetected until advanced stages, when treatment becomes significantly harder and survival outcomes worsen dramatically.
- Common warning signs — sores that won't heal after fifteen days, unusual patches, lumps, persistent pain, or difficulty swallowing — are often dismissed as minor irritations until it is too late.
- Tobacco and alcohol drive roughly 80% of cases, but HPV, poor oral hygiene, malnutrition, and sun exposure on the lips also quietly raise individual risk.
- Specialists called stomatologists can identify suspicious lesions early, yet many patients never seek evaluation until symptoms become impossible to ignore.
- Brazil's May campaign is pushing for wider public awareness and easier access to specialist consultations, betting that earlier diagnosis will shift outcomes across the country.
May in Brazil carries a quiet but insistent public health message: pay closer attention to your mouth. The National Campaign for Awareness and Prevention of Oral Cancer runs through the month, culminating on May 31st — a date that doubles as both World No Tobacco Day and National Oral Cancer Prevention Day. The campaign exists because oral cancer is a disease skilled at disguise, presenting itself as something ordinary that seems likely to pass on its own.
Dentist and oral pathologist Simone Amaral points to timing as the central problem. Too many patients discover their diagnosis only after the disease has advanced, narrowing treatment options and worsening outcomes. Early detection, she emphasizes, is transformative — the difference between a manageable illness and a life-altering one. The warning signs she outlines are specific: sores that persist beyond fifteen days, white or red patches that don't fade, lumps, lingering pain, and difficulty chewing, swallowing, or speaking. None of these symptoms guarantee cancer, but none should be left unexamined.
The risk landscape is well understood. Tobacco and alcohol together account for roughly eighty percent of cases. HPV infection, poor oral hygiene, malnutrition, unprotected sun exposure on the lips, and ill-fitting dentures round out the picture. The hopeful counterpoint is that oral cancer is largely preventable, and when caught early, responds well to treatment.
The prescription for prevention is familiar but effective: avoid smoking, limit alcohol, maintain oral hygiene, eat well, protect lips from the sun, and see a dentist regularly. If something feels wrong for more than two weeks, a stomatologist — a specialist in oral disease diagnosis — should evaluate it. Brazil's May campaign is wagering that better information and earlier specialist access will intercept more cases before they reach the advanced stages that still arrive in clinics far too often.
May has arrived in Brazil with a quiet but urgent message: pay attention to your mouth. The National Campaign for Awareness and Prevention of Oral Cancer is running through the month, tethered to two dates that bookend the issue—World No Tobacco Day and National Oral Cancer Prevention Day, both on May 31st. The campaign exists because oral cancer often arrives without fanfare, disguising itself as something ordinary, something that will pass on its own. It rarely does.
Dentist and oral pathologist Simone Amaral explains that the disease can take root on the lips or anywhere inside the mouth's complex landscape. The real problem, she says, is timing. Many patients don't learn they have cancer until the disease has already advanced, which makes treatment harder and outcomes worse. Early detection, by contrast, changes everything—it's the difference between cure and compromise.
So what should you actually watch for? Amaral lists the warning signs with clinical precision: any sore that refuses to heal after fifteen days; white, red, or dark patches that don't fade; lumps or hardened areas; pain that lingers or a burning sensation that won't quit; trouble chewing, swallowing, or speaking. None of these symptoms are automatically cancer. But none of them should be ignored either. If something in your mouth feels wrong for more than a couple of weeks, a specialist needs to see it.
The risk factors are well-mapped by now. Tobacco and alcohol account for roughly eighty percent of cases—a statistic that has held steady for years. But they're not alone. Human papillomavirus infection, poor oral hygiene, malnutrition, unprotected sun exposure on the lips, and dentures that don't fit properly can all tip the scales toward disease. The point Amaral makes is stark but also hopeful: oral cancer is largely preventable, and when caught early, it responds to treatment at high rates.
The path forward is straightforward. See a stomatologist—a dentist who specializes in diagnosing oral disease—if anything seems off. These specialists know how to spot persistent canker sores, discolored patches, infections, benign tumors, and when a biopsy is needed. Don't wait for pain to worsen. Don't assume a strange spot will disappear on its own. The campaign's message is simple: don't ignore what your mouth is telling you.
Prevention, too, follows a familiar script. Don't smoke. Don't drink to excess. Brush and floss. Eat well. Use lip balm with sun protection when you're outside. See your dentist regularly. These aren't revolutionary ideas, but they work. The campaign this May is betting that better information and easier access to specialist evaluation will catch more cases early—before they become the advanced, harder-to-treat versions that still show up in clinics far too often. The question now is whether people will listen.
Citas Notables
Oral cancer is largely preventable and, when diagnosed early, shows high cure rates— Simone Amaral, dentist and oral pathologist
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does oral cancer so often get diagnosed late? It seems like the mouth is easy to see.
Because people don't know what to look for, and they assume small things will heal on their own. A sore that lasts three weeks feels like a minor annoyance, not a warning. By the time someone gets worried enough to see a doctor, months have passed.
And that delay actually matters for treatment?
It matters enormously. Early cancer is often contained, easier to remove, less likely to spread. Late cancer means bigger surgery, more aggressive treatment, more damage to how you eat and speak afterward.
The campaign mentions tobacco and alcohol as the main culprits. Are those really the only risks?
They're the biggest ones—eighty percent of cases. But HPV is growing as a cause, especially in younger people. Sun damage on the lips, poor dental hygiene, even a denture that doesn't fit right—these all add up.
So someone who doesn't smoke or drink much is safe?
Safer, maybe. But not completely safe. And someone who does smoke or drink needs to be extra vigilant about what's happening in their mouth.
What does a stomatologist actually do that a regular dentist doesn't?
They specialize in diagnosing disease. They know the subtle signs—what a normal patch looks like versus what doesn't belong. They can biopsy if needed. They're trained to catch things early.
If someone finds a sore that won't heal, how quickly should they move?
Within a couple of weeks, they should see someone. Fifteen days is the threshold the campaign uses—if it's still there, get it checked. Don't wait for it to hurt.