In order to obtain some etiological clues for oral and pharyngeal cancer in Japanese males, we examined mortality trends from cancer of the lip, buccal cavity and pharynx by site with other descriptive epidemiological features (1950-94). The data were obtained from Vital Statistics (Ministry of Health and Welfare, Japan). The 45-year trend in mortality was evaluated by computing crude and age-adjusted mortality rates, age-specific mortality rates, with birth cohort analysis. The crude mortality rate from cancer of the lip, buccal cavity and pharynx has increased by 3.7-fold, and age adjusted mortality rate by 1.7-fold in the 45-year period, with different mortality trends by site. In general, age-specific mortality has also been increasing with advancing age. The birth cohort analysis showed that the higher the mortality rate, the younger the birth cohort, but with different effects of birth cohort by site. Mortality from cancer of the lip, buccal cavity and pharynx has consistently been increasing in Japanese males from 1950 to 1994, with similar upward mortality trends for some specific sites.