Early stage of cervical cancer does not necessarily require hysterectomy, it depends on the patient’s specific situation. If the patient is relatively young and has fertility requirements, the uterus can be preserved and a hysterectomy of the cervix can be performed. In general, cervical cancer surgery is also known as extensive hysterectomy. By extensive resection, we mean the removal of the uterus, cervix, and paracervical tissues, and this surgical site does not include the ovaries and fallopian tubes. Usually, when cervical cancer reaches infiltrative stage I or II, extensive hysterectomy is the surgical choice. After total hysterectomy, the patient loses her fertility. For young women with fertility requirements, extensive cervical excision can be chosen, in which only the cervix is removed and the uterus is preserved, leaving the uterus attached to the vagina after the removal of the cervix.