Patients often ask me similar questions, such as how is your treatment working? Some doctors also ask what kind of liver cancer is suitable for interventional treatment? I find it really difficult to answer. I would like to ask a rhetorical question: To what extent are you satisfied with the treatment? Medical treatment is a complicated process, and doctors may not fully understand why two patients who look very similar and have similar treatment plans can live for one year and the other for 5 years. So I answer: Actually, any liver cancer is suitable for interventional treatment, but the plan needs to be adjusted at any time during the process of treatment, not that if the first interventional embolization is done, it will be embolized all the time from then on. It is possible that surgical resection can be implemented when appropriate, or radiofrequency treatment may be implemented again. More likely, targeted therapy and biological therapy are needed. In short, a combination of treatments is needed! The ultimate goal is to keep the patient “healthy”, although this health may not be so real, but I believe many patients and families will understand. Treatment is both psychological and physical, so the doctor should always give comfort and caution to the patient, so that he can understand his disease, but also understand the medical treatment, which is the essence of the return of medical treatment.