What’s the 10-year survival rate for microinvasive carcinoma?

The 10-year survival rate of micro-invasive cancer mostly stays around 90%. Microinvasive carcinoma, that is, on the basis of carcinoma in situ, the tumor just breaks through the basal layer of mucosa and forms a tiny infiltration and spread, actually belongs to the relatively early stage. Clinically, most of the patients can be clinically cured after radical surgical resection, and the survival rate of 10 years can reach about 90%, or even may be higher. Microinvasive carcinoma still needs to be well staged pathologically after surgery, and if it is highly malignant, it needs to adhere to radiotherapy and chemotherapy for a period of time to reduce the recurrence and metastasis rate, and further enhance the survival rate of the patients; if it is low malignant, regular follow-up examination in 3 to 6 months is enough.