The prognosis of cervical cancer is generally very good. The prognosis is determined by the standardization of surgery or not. Even in situ cancer should be adequately excised from the uterus; if the surgery is not adequate, there are recurrences after surgery, or even the development of invasive cancer, and the chance of cure is lost. However, the prerequisite is standardized hysterectomy and adequate separation of the ureter. In order to maximize the removal of the main sacral ligament, avoid recurrence and achieve radical cure, prophylactic ureteral stent implantation is necessary to maximize the removal of the uterus and to avoid distant leakage due to ureteral ischemia. The prognosis of the patient is assured. For larger masses, surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy still has a satisfactory outcome and the patient still has a chance to be cured. The outcome of surgical treatment depends largely on the surgeon’s surgical ability and experience, and thorough surgery is the patient’s hope.