The patient, male, 58 years old, found numbness in his arm in March 2010, and later his waist also hurt, and was successively examined in the county hospital as cervical spondylosis and lumbar disc bulge. Now, the CT examination at the cancer hospital revealed a shadow in the lung, according to which the doctor diagnosed advanced systemic metastasis of lung cancer, and bone pain is a symptom of bone metastasis. There are two tumors on the cervical vertebrae, one on the front side near the skin, which the patient said has existed for more than ten years and should be benign; one on the back of the neck next to the vertebrae, which is more urgent, but the patient also said this has also existed for more than ten years. The patient also said that it had existed for more than ten years. The patient is currently suffering from severe pain in the lumbar spine, and the diagnosis is that the lumbar spine is osteolytic damage caused by cancer metastasis. Previously has been treated by the place according to the ordinary lumbar spondylosis and cervical spondylosis, physical therapy is the main. Is it feasible to consider surgery to remove cervical spine tumor step by step, repair lumbar spine bones and even remove the lesion on the lung again? 2.In order to prevent paralysis, what is the feasibility of local radiotherapy for cervical tumor and lumbar spine lesions? How much does it cost? What are the risks? 3.Is the current idea of diagnosing bone metastasis from lung cancer completely correct? Can it be inferred that it is a benign bone tumor that metastasizes to the lung, or that the bone disease and the lung disease are independent attacks? 4. Is it wrong to temporarily use mannitol, dexamethasone and common painkillers to stop back pain? What are the rules for using hormones now? 5.There are doctors who say outright that the prognosis is not good and should not be treated, but as a son or daughter just found out we can’t just give up the chance! At least to increase the time and quality of life. Please Drs. point a direction? Other good advice …… please kindly provide! Xing Wenge, Department of Interventional Therapy, Tianjin Cancer Hospital