Biopsy for Suspicious Oral Lesions: A Review From the American Head and Neck Society‐Cancer Prevention Service
James Christopher Gates, Heather Edwards, Alessandro Villa, Nick Purdy, Michael Troka, Peter Varela, Quinn Self, Yingci Liu, Yusuf Dundar, Patricia Joyce Brooks, Dauren Adilbay, Andrew Birkeland, John Cramer

TL;DR
This paper reviews current and emerging methods for biopsying suspicious oral lesions to improve early diagnosis and intervention for oral cancer.
Contribution
The paper provides a narrative review and framework for future investigation on biopsy techniques and novel analysis methods for oral precancerous lesions.
Findings
Incisional punch biopsy is reproducible and often sufficient for diagnosis.
Combining saliva and plasma sampling may improve sensitivity in some cases.
AI shows promise in detecting dysplasia and predicting malignant progression.
Abstract
Oral cancer is often preceded by a precursor lesion. This presents an opportunity for early diagnosis and intervention. Method of biopsy and interpretation are not well standardized and novel methods of analysis are now being investigated. We conducted a narrative review of PubMed/MEDLINE (last search August 31, 2025), focusing on adult oral precancerous lesions evaluated in outpatient settings. Incisional punch biopsy is reproducible and often provides the diagnostic information needed. However, scalpel biopsy should be considered when initial biopsy is equivocal, depth of invasion is desired, or to minimize sampling bias. Limited studies show improved sensitivity of combining saliva and plasma sampling. Targeted fluorescent imaging may aid in future biopsy site selection. AI has shown encouraging results in both automated detection of dysplasia and prediction of malignant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral Health Pathology and Treatment · Head and Neck Cancer Studies · Salivary Gland Disorders and Functions
