Objective. This study aimed to determine the preva-lenceoflymphovascularinvasion(LVSI)inthecervixanditssurvival impact on women with early-stage cervical cancerspecimens who underwent radical hysterectomy. Materials and Methods. Lymphovascular invasion wasreviewed in 107 cases of cervical cancer stages IB1 and IIAandcomparedwiththeoriginalpathologicalexamination.In addition, the relapse impact was calculated appropri-ately for each patient and compared with the presence ofLVSI. Results. Lymphovascular invasion in the cervix wasdetected in 17.8% (9/107) of the cases (95% CI =11.37Y25.87) in the original pathological examination,and when the samples were reviewed specifically lookingfor this finding in this study, 74.8% (80/107) of the cases(95% CI = 65.9Y82.31) were positive. Patients werefollowed for a mean of 4.87 T 2.66 years, and tumorrelapse was not different among patients with (27.5%;22/80) and without (7.4%; 2/27) LVSI (p = .058), althougha strong tendency was demonstrated.