The treatment of cervical cancer is based on surgical methods, supplemented by radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Some patients, depending on their specific conditions, can also choose combined Chinese and Western medicine treatment or Chinese medicine conditioning. The reasonable choice of surgical methods and treatment determines the treatment effect as well as the prognosis of the patient’s life and physical condition. For patients who have not had children, fertility can generally be preserved as appropriate, with regular follow-ups to prevent recurrence. For women who have given birth, hysterectomy is generally considered. 1.Surgical treatment of cervical cancer In early stage of cervical cancer, the internal part of lesion can be removed; in middle and late stage of cancer that has not spread, removal of uterus and some of its accessories can be considered. When the scope of tumor is larger, combined with chemotherapy, the treatment effect is better. For some patients with important medical comorbidities, such as diabetes and hypertension, who cannot tolerate the treatment of surgery, chemotherapy can be used to shrink part of the cancer before surgery, and then surgery can be performed depending on the situation. Such a combination of treatment is a better surgical plan. 2.Radiation therapy for cervical cancer Radiotherapy or chemotherapy alone is mostly used for elderly patients with cervical cancer, those whose cancer cells have spread, and those who are intolerant to surgery and multi-organ lesions. For advanced cancer and recurrent cancer, radiotherapy and chemotherapy are usually used without complete removal by surgery. For patients with hysterectomy, it can be used as adjuvant therapy after surgery to eliminate the recurrence and metastasis of tumor. 3.Hormone therapy for cervical cancer Since tumor depends on estrogen for growth and development, the use of androgen therapy can induce tumor shrinkage and reversal. For patients with lung metastasis, advanced or recurrent cervical cancer, the effect of hormone therapy is better. Since hormone therapy, unlike chemotherapy, has less side effects and adverse reactions, it is more easily accepted by patients, but it is not effective for recurrent or persistent lesions in the pelvis and is contraindicated for those with liver dysfunction. In the treatment of cervical cancer, although the surgical method is more damaging to the patient’s body, the prognosis is generally better, hormone and radiotherapy also have certain side effects and are conservative treatments, and there is still a certain gap in efficacy. Therefore, the treatment of cervical cancer still needs to be decided according to the specific conditions of patients.