Follow-up after treatment for cervical cancer

Follow-up after treatment is an important part of cancer care. Follow-up for cervical cancer is often shared among the cancer specialists (gynecologist, radiation oncologist, medical oncologist and surgical oncologist) and your family doctor. Your healthcare team will work with you to decide on follow-up care to meet your needs.

Don’t wait until your next scheduled appointment to report any new symptoms and symptoms that don’t go away. Tell your healthcare team if you have:

  • pain in the pelvis, hips, back or legs
  • bleeding or discharge from the vagina
  • changes in bowel habits or bladder function
  • unexplained weight loss
  • a cough that doesn’t go away

The chance that cervical cancer will come back (recur) is greatest within 2 to 3 years, so you will need close follow-up during this time.

Schedule for follow-up visits

Follow-up visits for cervical cancer are usually scheduled:

  • every 3 to 4 months for the first 2 years after initial treatment
  • every 6 to 12 months for the next 3 years (years 3 to 5)
  • once a year after 5 years

During follow-up visits

During a follow-up visit, your healthcare team will usually ask questions about the side effects of treatment and how you’re coping.

Your doctor may do a physical exam, including:

  • a pelvic exam
  • a digital rectal exam (DRE)
  • feeling the lymph nodes above the collarbones
  • a Pap test

Regular Pap tests are done after treatment for cervical cancer. Samples are taken from remaining portions of the cervix or from the vagina. Pap tests may not be done for the first year after surgery or radiation therapy because cell and tissue changes from these treatments can make the results hard to correctly understand.

Tests are often part of follow-up care. You may have:

  • blood tests including a complete blood count (CBC) and blood chemistry tests
  • a colposcopy, which uses a lighted magnifying instrument to examine the vulva, vagina and cervix
  • imaging tests such as a chest x-ray, a CT scan, an MRI scan or a PET scan

If the cancer has come back, you and your healthcare team will discuss a plan for your treatment and care.

Questions to ask about follow-up

To make the decisions that are right for you, ask your healthcare team questions about follow-up.

Révision par les experts et références

  • Guideline Resource Unit (GURU). Cancer of the Uterine Cervix. Edmonton: Alberta Health Services; 2021: Clinical Practice Guideline GYNE-004 Version: 6. https://www.albertahealthservices.ca/info/cancerguidelines.aspx.
  • American Cancer Society. Treating Cervical Cancer. 2021. https://www.cancer.org/.
  • National Comprehensive Cancer Network. NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Cervical Cancer Version 1.2023. 2023.
  • Oleszewski K. Cervical cancer. Yarbro CH, Wujcik D, Gobel B (eds.). Cancer Nursing: Principles and Practice. 8th ed. Burlington, MA: Jone & Bartlett Learning; 2018: Kindle version, [chapter 50], https://read.amazon.ca/?asin=B0BG3DPT4Q&language=en-CA.

Votre source de confiance pour des informations fiables sur le cancer

Le soutien des lecteurs comme vous nous permet de continuer à fournir des informations de la plus haute qualité sur plus de 100 types de cancer.

Nous sommes là pour vous garantir un accès facile à des informations fiables sur le cancer, ainsi qu’aux millions de personnes qui visitent ce site Web chaque année. Mais nous ne pouvons pas y arriver seuls.

Chaque don nous permet d’offrir des informations fiables sur le cancer et finance des services de soutien empreints de compassion et des projets de recherche prometteurs. Faites un don dès maintenant, car chaque dollar compte. Nous vous remercions.

Non-responsabilité médicale

L'information fournie par la Société canadienne du cancer ne saurait remplacer le lien qui vous unit à votre médecin. Nos renseignements sont d’ordre général; avant de prendre toute décision de nature médicale ou si vous avez des questions concernant votre état de santé personnel, assurez-vous de parler à un professionnel de la santé qualifié.

Nous faisons le maximum pour que les renseignements que nous diffusons soient toujours exacts et fiables, mais nous ne pouvons garantir leur exhaustivité, pas plus que l’absence totale d’erreur.

La Société canadienne du cancer n’assume aucune responsabilité quant à la qualité des renseignements ou des services offerts par d'autres organismes mentionnés sur cancer.ca, pas plus qu’elle ne cautionne un service, un produit, un traitement ou une thérapie en particulier. 


1-888-939-3333 | cancer.ca | © 2026 Canadian Cancer Society