The survival time of endometrial cancer is generally determined by the pathological stage, the extent of lesion erosion, whether the surgery is complete or not, the patient’s physical condition after surgery, and the follow-up. If endometrial cancer is early stage, completely removed during surgery, and no recurrence after 5 years of follow-up, it can generally survive for a long time. If endometrial cancer is already in the middle or late stage when it is detected, and has spread to the muscular layer or has metastasis in the pelvis, the survival time after surgery will be relatively short. Post-operative radiotherapy and symptomatic treatment can only improve the survival period of patients, but cannot cure them completely, and they may survive for 2-3 years. In addition, the development of endometrial cancer is relatively long, so women need to have regular health checkups, and when there are early atypical lesions in the uterine cavity, they should go to the hospital for examination and treatment in time, and early detection can be completely cured.