How many years can you live with cervical cancer?

There is no authoritative data indicating how many years can one live with cervical cancer. The 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer ranges from 9.3% to 97.5%, which needs to be analyzed according to the patient’s tumor stage, patient’s physical status and treatment. Patients with cervical cancer need to take surgical treatment, drug treatment and radiotherapy in time.
The 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer needs to be judged according to the stage of cervical cancer. Generally speaking, the 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer stage I is 89.1%~97.5%, the 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer stage II is 65.8%~75.7%, the 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer stage III is 39.7%~41.5%, and the 5-year survival rate of cervical cancer stage IV is lower, generally at 9.3%~22%.
Patients with stage I cervical cancer can undergo total hysterectomy, cervical conization, or modified radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymph node dissection. If patients present stage II cervical cancer, they need to take modified radical or radical total hysterectomy. Cervical cancer patients also need to be treated with chemotherapeutic drugs such as carboplatin and paclitaxel under the guidance of doctors, as well as targeted drugs such as bevacizumab, and some of the patients can also be treated with radiation irradiation.
There is no clear information showing that cervical cancer patients can live for several years, but patients need to consult doctors in time, and doctors will judge the specific survival time according to patients’ conditions.