Back to Articles

Mouth sores caused by cancer treatment: How to cope

If you’re about to start cancer treatment, know that certain treatments can cause mouth sores. The term that health care providers use for mouth sores is oral mucositis.

Mouth sores can hurt and feel uncomfortable. They can range from minor problems to severe complications. They could make you stop your cancer treatment. These sores can make it hard to drink and could make you lose weight because you can’t eat enough.

Cancer-related mouth sores form on the inside of your mouth or on your lips. The sores look like burns and can hurt. Mouth sores can make it hard to eat, talk, swallow and breathe.

Sores can happen anywhere on the soft tissues of your lips or your mouth. Sores can happen on the gums, the inside of your cheeks, tongue, and roof or floor of the mouth. Sores can also happen in the tube that carries the food you swallow to your stomach. This tube is called the esophagus.

In general, cancer treatments that can cause mouth sores include:

Whether your cancer treatment will cause mouth sores depends on which treatments you have and what doses you receive. Ask your health care provider whether your specific medicines or treatments might cause mouth sores.

Although there’s no sure way to prevent mouth sores, you can lower your risk. Talk to your health care provider about your risk of mouth sores and what you can do.

Your provider might recommend that you:

Your provider may recommend other ways to reduce your risk of mouth sores, such as:

Even if you try to prevent mouth sores, you may still get them. Treatment for mouth sores can help control the pain as you wait for the cells in your mouth to heal.

Tell your health care provider if your mouth feels sensitive or you notice any sores forming. Your provider may recommend treatments, such as:

There are other simple steps you can take to lower the pain of mouth sores. You might:

If your mouth sores get worse, they can become severe and cause other problems. Sometimes these problems get so bad that you have to stop your cancer treatment for a while.

Complications can include:

© 1998-2024 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). All rights reserved.

Wir machen Gesundheit möglich

Da die Bevölkerung in Ost-Zentral-Indiana wächst, stellen wir die Gesundheitsversorgung dort bereit, wo die Menschen sie am meisten benötigen. Neben dem Hancock Regional Hospital, das laut Lown Hospital Index als eines der sichersten des Landes gilt, umfasst unser Netzwerk mehr als 30 weitere Standorte in der Nähe Ihres Zuhauses oder Arbeitsplatzes.

Erfahren Sie mehr über Hancock