It is generally believed that liver metastasis from intestinal cancer is very difficult to treat and basically incurable. Even with the best treatment plan, it is difficult to live beyond two years, but there are many patients I have treated who have been cured. The key to cure is the distribution of metastatic lesions in the liver and their response to chemotherapy, as well as the ability to achieve complete cure through chemotherapy combined with surgical resection. This is why multidisciplinary discussion and cooperation is so important. One of my patients had a large metastatic liver lesion with intestinal cancer, and he was told that he would not live more than 3 months after examination. I first treated him with chemotherapy, and after 2-3 courses of treatment, the examination revealed that the original lesion had shrunk significantly. At that time, I went to the director of liver surgery, and through discussing and comparing the CT films before and after chemotherapy, as well as the condition of the liver, I decided to take surgical resection for him. The result was smooth and the metastatic lesion in the liver was completely removed. After several courses of chemotherapy, the patient is now 5 years post-surgery, and everything in his examination is abnormal, and he is able to do his normal work. There have been several people with similar condition of this patient, and they reached cure from incurable disease. Therefore, advanced intestinal cancer with liver metastasis is not terrible, and a considerable number of people can be cured.