Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Pap Test
vs HPV Test
Two Different Tests, Two Different Purposes — Why You Need Both

The Pap test and the HPV test are both collected from the cervix during a pelvic exam — but they test for entirely different things and provide complementary information. Understanding what each test looks for helps you understand your results and why your screening interval is what it is.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG performs cervical cancer screening at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices following current guidelines.

Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted
Serving Lapeer County & Oakland County

Two Tests, Two Different Questions

The Pap test and the HPV test are collected at the same appointment using the same cervical swab — but they answer fundamentally different questions and provide complementary information that together create a more complete picture of cervical health than either test alone.

The Pap test asks: Are there abnormal cells visible on the cervix right now? The HPV test asks: Is a high-risk HPV strain present on the cervix? A woman can have a positive HPV test with a normal Pap (HPV is present but has not yet caused visible cellular changes). She can have an abnormal Pap with a negative HPV test (cellular changes present, but not from high-risk HPV). And she can have both tests positive — which is the combination that most significantly increases the probability of high-grade dysplasia being present. Using both tests together (co-testing) provides the most sensitive and specific screening approach and supports the longest safe interval between screening rounds.

The Pap Test and the HPV Test — Side by Side

The Pap Test (Cervical Cytology) — What It Tests

The Pap test collects cervical cells and examines them under a microscope for abnormal appearance. The pathologist is looking at the actual cells — their shape, size, and nuclear characteristics — to identify changes that suggest dysplasia. The Pap test is a morphologic test: it looks at what the cells look like, not at the presence of a specific virus or marker. Results are reported as NILM (normal), ASCUS, LSIL, HSIL, ASC-H, or AGC. A Pap test can be abnormal without HPV being detected — and it can be normal even when HPV is present because the virus may not yet have caused visible cellular changes.

The HPV Test — What It Tests

The HPV test is a molecular test that detects the DNA or RNA of high-risk HPV strains in the cervical cell sample. It identifies whether specific high-risk HPV types are present — not what the cells look like. Most HPV tests report whether any high-risk HPV is detected, and many specifically identify whether HPV 16 or HPV 18 is present (because these two strains carry the highest cancer risk). The HPV test does not diagnose dysplasia or cancer — it identifies the presence of the viral infection that, if persistent, can cause dysplasia.

Why Co-Testing Is Preferred for Women 30 to 65

When both tests are performed together, the combined result provides more information than either test alone. A co-test that is negative on both Pap and HPV provides the strongest reassurance against cervical cancer development in the near term — so strong that the recommended interval before the next screening is five years. A co-test that is positive on HPV but normal on Pap identifies women who need closer monitoring (one-year repeat or immediate colposcopy for HPV 16/18) before a cellular change would even be visible. This early identification of at-risk women is the key advantage of co-testing over Pap-alone screening.

HPV Primary Screening — An Alternative Approach

Some current guidelines support primary HPV testing — using the HPV test alone as the primary screening tool, without a routine Pap, for women aged 25 and older. When the HPV test is positive on primary screening, a Pap (reflex cytology) is then performed on the same sample. HPV primary screening has equivalent or better sensitivity for high-grade dysplasia compared to co-testing and is becoming more widely adopted. The approach used at your screening visit is discussed at the well-woman exam at Lapeer Women’s Health.

Pap Test Alone for Women Under 30

For women aged 21 to 29, the Pap test is performed alone — without HPV co-testing — every three years. This is because high-risk HPV is extremely common in women under 30 (the majority of sexually active women in this age group will have HPV at some point) and almost always clears without causing lasting dysplasia. Adding HPV testing in this age group would trigger a large number of colposcopy referrals for infections that are virtually certain to resolve, without meaningfully improving outcomes. The Pap alone in this age group effectively identifies the rare cases where significant dysplasia has developed without over-triggering investigation for transient infections.

Cervical Screening at Lapeer Women’s Health

Guideline-Based Screening Intervals

Cervical cancer screening at Lapeer Women’s Health follows current guidelines: Pap alone every 3 years for ages 21–29; co-testing every 5 years (preferred) or Pap alone every 3 years for ages 30–65. Women with prior abnormal results, high-grade dysplasia treatment, or immunocompromising conditions are screened more frequently based on their specific history.

Result Communication With Context

Every abnormal Pap or HPV result is communicated with a clear explanation of what the result means, what the recommended follow-up is, and why. Results communicated through a patient portal without adequate explanation generate unnecessary anxiety — and at Lapeer Women’s Health, the goal is that you understand your result before you receive it so that you know what to expect.

Complete Follow-Up Pathway

Colposcopy, cervical biopsy, LEEP, and post-treatment surveillance are all available at Lapeer Women’s Health — so your cervical health care from initial screening through any required treatment and subsequent surveillance is managed in one place.

Frequently Asked Questions
No. A pelvic exam is a physical examination of the pelvic organs — the external genitalia, vagina, cervix, uterus, and ovaries — that assesses their anatomy, position, size, and tenderness. A Pap test is a specific sample collection from the cervix that is sent to a laboratory for cytologic analysis. The Pap test is performed during a pelvic exam, but a pelvic exam can be performed without a Pap test — and after certain ages, the Pap test is no longer indicated while pelvic exams continue. Some women forgo their annual well-woman visit because they believe they no longer need a Pap test — but there are reasons for the pelvic examination and the broader well-woman visit that are independent of whether a Pap test is due that year.
HPV infection is extremely common in sexually active women under 30 — studies show that the majority of women in this age group have or will have HPV within a few years of becoming sexually active. In almost all cases, the immune system clears HPV in young women within one to two years without producing significant dysplasia. Adding HPV testing in this age group would detect a very high proportion of transient infections that will resolve on their own, triggering colposcopy referrals and patient anxiety for infections that have a near-zero probability of causing cancer. The Pap test alone in this age group identifies the very small number of young women who have developed significant dysplasia, while avoiding the over-investigation that HPV testing would produce.
Yes. Cervical cancer screening including Pap and HPV co-testing is performed at both the Lapeer office (1245 N Main St, Lapeer, MI — (810) 969-4670) and the Rochester Hills office (2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2, Rochester Hills, MI — (248) 923-3522). No referral is required.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
Current Cervical Screening — At Both Our Lapeer and Rochester Hills Offices.

Our team follows current guidelines for Pap and HPV co-testing. No referral required.

Schedule a Gynecologic Visit

Educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Content reviewed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD PhD FACOG.

Gynecologic care for women of every age

Lapeer Women’s Health — Rochester Hills
2710 S Rochester Rd, Suite 2
Rochester Hills, MI 48307

Serving patients in Lapeer, Rochester Hills, and surrounding communities throughout Southeast Michigan.