Treatment of cervical cancer abroad offers modern methods of surgery and therapy in accordance with the individual characteristics of the patient. Hospitals in Singapore, Israel, China, Korea, Germany, India and Turkey have the latest equipment for high-quality diagnostics (colposcopy, immunocytochemical examination of cancer markers) and successful treatment even in the last stages of the disease.

Methods of treatment of cervical cancer abroad

Surgery

Clinics in Germany, Israel, and Korea have mostly abandoned traditional hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) in favor of highly effective surgery using the Da Vinci robot. This system allows you to remove the tumor using a minimally invasive method. As a result, blood loss, the risk of postoperative infections, and the recovery period are reduced.

Radiation therapy

Radiation therapy is usually prescribed when the cancer has spread beyond the cervix or has reached a large size (more than 4 cm). New radiation methods in clinics in Israel, Singapore, Japan and Korea help to direct high doses of radiation to the tumor, destroying it in a short course of several sessions, and reduce side effects.

Brachytherapy. In internal radiation therapy, radioactive implants are inserted into the cervix through the vagina and remain next to the neoplasm for several days. High-dose brachytherapy is performed on an outpatient basis and involves the administration of capsules with the active substance for several minutes.
Intensive modulated radiation therapy and radiosurgery - high—intensity radiation is directed strictly at the tumor in order to reduce the likelihood of damage to surrounding tissues.

Other methods

Cryotherapy is actively used in China, and ultrasound ablation is becoming more widespread in Korea and Singapore. Non—surgical techniques - doctors get access to the tumor by inserting thin probes. 

Immune therapy uses the body's internal resources: activates and directs immune cells to the tumor. 

If common methods have not led to recovery, clinics in Israel and Germany offer their patients treatment for cervical cancer using innovative drugs in international clinical trials.