The survival time of patients with liver occupancy depends on the nature of the lesion. Benign lesions have little or no impact on the patient’s life, while malignant lesions have a survival time of a few months to ten years or more, depending on the case.
Some benign diseases presenting as liver occupations generally do not affect the survival time of the patient, such as liver cysts and hepatic hemangiomas. These diseases have little effect on the normal function of the liver and the occurrence of cancer is small, and can usually be observed conservatively.
Some malignant diseases, such as hepatocellular carcinoma, are diseases that seriously affect the normal function of the liver, and the specific survival time is related to the development of the disease and the treatment.
Patients who are found early and treated in time can achieve a longer survival period, up to ten years or even longer. If the disease is detected late and not treated appropriately, the survival period may be only a few months.
If liver metastasis is detected, it should be treated promptly.