Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) emphasizes internal causes, dialectically views the body as a whole, prioritizes the individual, and provides comprehensive treatment and regulation. TCM diagnosis and treatment are tailored to each person's unique condition, with individualized prescriptions, and the effects are notably significant. In contrast, the most extreme approach in Western medicine is a one-size-fits-all method, cutting out whatever is problematic.

Theoretically, if the root cause of the disease is removed, the symptoms should be eliminated. However, the reality is not so. Many patients still experience recurrence, metastasis, and spread after undergoing surgery.

Traditional Chinese medicine focuses on treating the root cause of disease, improving the patient's overall physical constitution and internal environment, thereby depriving tumors of the conducive internal conditions for rapid growth and leading to improvement of the condition. Traditional Chinese medicine can indeed inhibit tumor growth by regulating the body's internal environment from within.

Traditional Chinese medicine's understanding of tumors is rational and scientific. Its theories of syndrome differentiation, pattern classification, and others provide a highly comprehensive summary of the pathogenesis of tumors and the prognosis of the disease course. This is of significant importance in the treatment of tumors. Furthermore, various methods of Chinese medicine for treating tumors are derived from practical experience and have been validated through practice. Many Chinese herbs themselves possess anti-tumor properties; for example, some plant-based anti-tumor drugs and biological response modifiers currently in use are effective components of certain Chinese medicinal herbs.