How long can you live after chemotherapy for cervical cancer?

  For the treatment of cervical cancer, adjuvant chemotherapy was considered not significant in the past, but with the clinical research in recent years, it is found that surgery combined with chemotherapy and radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy can improve the treatment effect of cervical cancer, reduce recurrence and metastasis, and prolong the survival of patients. However, the specific prolongation of patients’ survival for several years varies from person to person.  Early stage cervical cancer patients, usually treated by surgical removal of the cervix, can have a 5-year survival probability of more than 90% after combined chemotherapy if no metastasis occurs. For patients with mid- to late-stage cervical cancer who are no longer eligible for surgery, combined radiotherapy can improve patients’ bleeding or pelvic and abdominal symptoms, thus prolonging patients’ life expectancy, with a survival pass of 3-5 years. For patients with more advanced cervical cancer, their survival time may be about 2 years or even shorter.  In conclusion, there is no exact time for how long cervical cancer patients can live after chemotherapy, it should be combined with patients’ own specific conditions and the severity of the disease. While actively cooperating with doctors, they must adjust their mindset, strengthen nutrition and eat more foods rich in vitamins and proteins, etc.