There are many surgical methods for cervical cancer, one needs to be determined by doctors according to the level of doctors, the scale of hospitals and the grade of surgical instruments, and the other needs to be determined by the patient’s condition (general condition, stage of lesion, age, requirement for reproduction, urgency of preserving the uterus, etc.). At present, most senior doctors in large hospitals at home and abroad use minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery to treat cervical cancer, while hospitals without such conditions or lower-ranked doctors use open surgery to treat cervical cancer. Patients who wish to preserve their fertility or uterus and meet certain conditions can be considered for cervical cancer surgery that preserves fertility. Very early stage cervical cancer (stage Ia1) can be considered for type I extra-fascial hysterectomy LEEP and CKC are generally not used for the treatment of cervical cancer, but mostly for the treatment of precancerous lesions of the cervix and the differential diagnosis of early cervical cancer. For precancerous lesions of the cervix, the surgical results of both are approximately the same, but if the lesions are more extensive and deep, CKC is more accurate in determining the cellular status of the cut edge, and is more accurate than LEEP in determining the next step of treatment. Whether adjuvant therapy is needed after cervical cancer depends on the presence of high-risk factors after surgery. If postoperative cancer is found to infiltrate more than 1/2 of the cervical thickness, or metastasis from lymph nodes, or lymphatic vascular interstitial infiltration, or a special category of cervical cancer with higher malignancy, postoperative radiotherapy or chemotherapy is usually required.