Can I get pregnant if I have cervical cancer?

  Cervical cancer is the most common gynecological malignancy. The high incidence age of in situ cancer is 30 to 35 years old, and invasive cancer is 45 to 55 years old; in recent years, its incidence has a tendency to be younger. There is a close relationship between cervical cancer and the ability to get pregnant, and pregnancy is a great threat to the health of cervical cancer patients, and even threatens their lives. So, can you get pregnant after cervical cancer cure? That is to say, whether cervical cancer can affect fertility after surgery is a great concern for those women who have not yet had children and have cervical cancer.  If the patient has cervical cancer in situ, it can be completely cured through cervical conization treatment, which has no effect on future pregnancy; if the patient is in the middle and late stage of surgery, the scope of excision is larger, or even the whole hysterectomy is required, which requires long-term medication and radiation therapy after surgery, so it may affect pregnancy.  It is impossible to preserve fertility after hysterectomy for cervical cancer. However, if the uterus is preserved by conservative treatment, the uterus is an important place for conceiving babies, so the fertility function can be preserved in this case. Therefore, we should go for examination in time, and early cancer is still very good to be treated.