Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

No More Cracked Jaws: Nova Scotia Surgeons Use Lasers To Target Oral Cancers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2016 11:54 AM
    HALIFAX — Facing a growing epidemic of throat and mouth cancer caused by HPV, Halifax doctors are refining a surgical technique that uses lasers to remove tumours - avoiding the standard practice of cracking open a patient's jaw.
     
    "We are trying to remove it through the mouth using scopes, said Dr. Matt Rigby, a head and neck surgeon at the QE II Health Sciences Centre. "So that actually exposes the tumour at the back of the tongue which you can't see easily by direct line of sight."
     
    Rigby said the advantage for the patient is that the surgery avoids the traditional method of splitting the jaw bone to operate in difficult-to-reach areas, while cutting recovery time down to three to five days, as opposed to 10 days to two weeks for conventional surgery.
     
    "We not only want a cure, but the best standard of life after a cure," he said.
     
    The Halifax hospital is the only one in Canada that uses trans-oral laser microsurgery, and is one of only a handful in North America. It was first brought to Halifax by Dr. Mark Taylor in 2002.
     
    Rigby said surgical advances and more research will be key in dealing with a more than 200-per-cent increase in mouth and throat cancers caused by HPV over the last 20 years.
     
    Dr. Rob Hart, also a head and neck surgeon in Halifax, has been researching specific cellular mechanisms that may be causing the throat and mouth cancers. His research team is looking for pathways to interrupt the development of the cancers.
     
    "Why do some people who get an HPV infection develop a cancer and others don't? We don't know the answer to that."
     
    Hart said what's known is that there has been a massive shift from traditional causes such as heavy smoking and drinking to HPV-related cancers. The ratio is now 80 per cent related to HPV and 20 per cent to other causes.
     
    He said there are about 5,000 to 6,000 new oral cancer cases in Canada each year, with 150 to 200 of them in Nova Scotia.
     
    Currently about seven per cent of sexually active adults have an oral HPV infection, while between 65 and 100 per cent of sexually active adults will have an oral exposure to the virus.
     
    Most however, will clear the virus from their systems and will show few to no symptoms as long as they have it.
     
    Hart said any link to oral sex in particular is a "supposition" at this point.
     
    "We know that people who have more sexual partners have higher risk of HPV infection but, pretty much anybody who is sexually active will have had some exposure at some point in their life. Oral to oral contact is probably as important as oral to genital contact."
     
    Both Hart and Rigby say it's hoped vaccine programs in young girls and boys will help curb the rapid rise in HPV-related cancers, projected to be half of all throat and mouth cancers by 2030.
     
    Hart said the statistics haven't hit the "peak of the curve" yet.
     
    "It will flatline and then as the vaccinated cohort moves forward we hope to see it tail off substantially," said Hart. "But I think we are probably 30 years before we know whether it makes a difference."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Top Cop In B.C. Terror Case Concerned About Having Experienced Officers: Court

    Emails read in court show Sgt. Bill Kalkat asked undercover officers how they planned to avoid potential legal issues months before John Nuttall and Amanda Korody were arrested for plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature in 2013.

    Top Cop In B.C. Terror Case Concerned About Having Experienced Officers: Court

    Eminent Canadians To Advise Justin Trudeau On Merit Based Appointments To Senate

    The independent advisory board on Senate appointments will be chaired by Huguette Labelle, a former deputy minister in various federal departments and former chancellor of the University of Ottawa.

    Eminent Canadians To Advise Justin Trudeau On Merit Based Appointments To Senate

    Canada Not Invited To Paris Defence Ministers' To Discuss ISIL Fight, Confirms Harjit Sajjan

    Canada Not Invited To Paris Defence Ministers' To Discuss ISIL Fight, Confirms Harjit Sajjan
    Asked why Canada was not invited, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says there are meetings on the subject all the time and said not being part of the Paris meeting doesn't put Canada on the outside.

    Canada Not Invited To Paris Defence Ministers' To Discuss ISIL Fight, Confirms Harjit Sajjan

    Latest Deer Cull In Cranbrook, B.C., Removes 20 Deer From Growing Population

    Latest Deer Cull In Cranbrook, B.C., Removes 20 Deer From Growing Population
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — The City of Cranbrook, B.C., confirms 20 deer were captured and euthanized during a recent cull in that East Kootenay city.

    Latest Deer Cull In Cranbrook, B.C., Removes 20 Deer From Growing Population

    College Reprimands Halifax Doctor For Improperly Prescribing Opiods

    College Reprimands Halifax Doctor For Improperly Prescribing Opiods
      The decision against Dr. Rayan Alhazmi was released Monday by the college, which is the governing body for doctors in the province.

    College Reprimands Halifax Doctor For Improperly Prescribing Opiods

    Kathleen Wynne Says Pledge To Cut Auto Insurance 15 Per Cent Was A 'stretch Goal'

    Kathleen Wynne Says Pledge To Cut Auto Insurance 15 Per Cent Was A 'stretch Goal'
    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government's target to cut auto insurance rates by 15 per cent by last year was a "stretch goal."

    Kathleen Wynne Says Pledge To Cut Auto Insurance 15 Per Cent Was A 'stretch Goal'