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High-risk HPV was not found. This significantly reduces your short-term cervical cancer risk.
The test did not find any of the 14 high-risk HPV types that can cause cervical, anal, oral, and other cancers. This is the ideal result.
Continue routine cervical screening as recommended for your age group. HPV vaccination is still recommended if you haven't completed the series.
High-Risk HPV: Not detected — negativeNo high-risk HPV types were detected in your sample.
No immediate action needed. Continue regular cervical cancer screening.
High-Risk HPV: Not detectedYour high-risk HPV test is negative. Very low viral loads occasionally fall below detection thresholds but negative is still a very reassuring result.
Continue routine screening.
High-Risk HPV: Not detected (low sensitivity range)High-risk HPV was not found. This significantly reduces your short-term cervical cancer risk.
Good result. Continue regular screening.
High-Risk HPV: Not detected — negativeNo cancer-causing HPV types detected. This is the best possible result.
Excellent. If not vaccinated, consider HPV vaccination for ongoing protection.
High-Risk HPV: Not detectedA high-risk HPV type was detected, but it is not HPV 16 or 18 (which cause the most cancers). The other 12 high-risk types are less aggressive but still require monitoring. Most HPV infections clear within 2 years without causing cancer.
Your doctor will likely recommend a colposcopy (cervical examination) or closer follow-up pap smears. Most cases resolve naturally.
High-Risk HPV: Detected — non-16/18 high-risk typeHPV 16 and 18 are responsible for approximately 70% of cervical cancers and are the highest-risk strains. A positive result means these viruses are present, but most infections still clear naturally. However, regular monitoring is essential to catch any precancerous changes early.
Colposcopy referral is strongly recommended to examine the cervix closely for any precancerous changes. Early detection means very high cure rates.
High-Risk HPV: Detected — HPV 16 or 18 positiveHigh-risk HPV combined with abnormal cervical cells significantly raises concern for precancerous or cancerous changes. This requires urgent investigation but caught at this stage, treatment is very effective.
Urgent colposcopy referral is required. Precancerous cervical changes are highly treatable with simple procedures. Do not delay this appointment.
High-Risk HPV: Detected with abnormal cytologyUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.