Can I have surgery if my cervical cancer hasn’t metastasized?

Cervical cancer without metastasis generally means no distant metastasis, i.e. cervical cancer stage I~III. Surgery is preferred, and radiotherapy and chemotherapy are also needed. If the patient’s physical condition is poor and cannot tolerate surgery, radical radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy is needed.
The advantage of surgery is that it can preserve the patient’s ovaries and vaginal function, and it is suitable for early-stage patients, such as stage IA and IIA. In the early stage of the disease, lymph nodes and distant metastasis have not occurred, and at this time, patients have a high chance of radical surgery and a high cure rate. Surgery is the main treatment method for early stage cervical cancer.
Radiotherapy and chemotherapy are suitable for patients with cervical cancer stages IB2, IIA2 and IIB~IVA, as well as patients with poor systemic condition who are not suitable for surgical treatment.
Early detection, early diagnosis and early treatment are greatly beneficial to the regression of the disease. Therefore, early detection and early diagnosis of non-metastatic cervical cancer should be timely followed by surgical treatment as prescribed by doctors.