The 10-year survival rate is a method of disease statistics in which survival times of ten years and more are counted within the 10-year survival rate.
The 10-year survival rate of a disease in medicine refers to the proportion of the total number of people selected for a disease who did not experience a terminal event in the tenth year, according to certain criteria such as how they received a certain treatment, the same stage of the disease, and so on. Terminal events in this context usually refer to death due to recurrence or metastasis of the disease, loss of visits, and so on.
People who do not experience a terminal event such as death or loss of hospitalization in the ten-year survival statistics have a survival time of at least ten years. The 10-year survival rate is usually limited by region, age, gender, etc., and the data can only be used as a reference.
The disease should be actively treated, regular review, and maintain healthy living habits. Survival time can be improved.