Calcified foci in the right lobe of the liver are relatively common in clinical practice, and most of them are isolated lesions that do not have clinical symptoms and do not cause liver function damage, so they do not affect the survival time, which is the same as that of normal people. However, if calcified foci in the right lobe of the liver are only local manifestations of certain lesions in the liver, the survival time of patients should be judged according to the specific liver lesions, for example, patients with both primary liver cancer and metastatic liver cancer may have calcified foci in the right lobe of the liver, and the five-year survival rate of patients with primary liver cancer is less than 30%. For small hepatocellular carcinoma or microscopic hepatocellular carcinoma, the survival time may be more than 5 years or even longer if timely surgery is given. If liver cancer is evaluated to be inoperable, most patients are likely to experience death within one year. The long-term prognosis of metastatic liver cancer varies greatly depending on the primary tumor.