Jugular abdominal cancer is judged as early or late stage according to whether there is any metastasis of organs, if there is distant or other organ metastasis, it is late stage, if there is no, it is early or intermediate stage. Pelvic cancer is a general term for malignant tumors around the pelvic region of duodenum, which involves more diseases. Clinical judgment of whether jugular abdominal cancer is early or advanced is based on imaging clinical staging and postoperative pathological staging. Generally speaking, clinical staging requires perfect CT, nuclear magnetic resonance and puncture biopsy to determine whether it is advanced or not. Pathologic staging can only be clarified after resection of the lesion. Usually, if metastasis is found in other organs such as liver, lung, gastrointestinal tract, abdominal cavity or peripheral lymph nodes after the diagnosis of juxta-abdominal cancer, it is considered to be in advanced stage, but the final diagnosis should be made by pathological examination such as puncture biopsy or biopsy after surgical resection. If there is juxtagastric cancer, it is recommended to go to the hospital in time and follow the doctor’s advice.