Lapeer · Rochester Hills · Telehealth

Abnormal Pap
& Cervical Health
Understanding Your Results, Your Next Steps, and Your Care at Every Stage

An abnormal Pap test result is one of the most anxiety-provoking pieces of news a woman can receive from her gynecologist — and one of the most misunderstood. Most abnormal results do not mean cancer. They mean the cervical cells have changes that require monitoring or evaluation, and that the surveillance system that exists to prevent cervical cancer is working exactly as intended. Understanding what your result actually means is the first step toward navigating it calmly and effectively.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG provides comprehensive cervical health evaluation, colposcopy, and cervical procedures at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices.

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

Cervical Health — Why the Screening System Works and What Happens When It Finds Something

Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers in medicine — because it has a long, detectable precancerous phase, a well-characterized causative agent (human papillomavirus, or HPV), and an effective screening system that identifies abnormal cells before they become invasive cancer. When the screening system works — when a Pap test or HPV test identifies an abnormality — it is not a failure. It is the system doing exactly what it was designed to do: catch changes early enough to monitor them, treat them when needed, and prevent cancer from developing.

The challenge is that the language of cervical screening results — ASCUS, LSIL, HSIL, CIN 1, CIN 2, CIN 3, NILM, high-risk HPV positive — is opaque and frightening to most women who receive it without adequate explanation. The gap between what a result means clinically and what a woman fears it means when she reads it in a patient portal is significant, and it produces unnecessary anxiety for the majority of women whose results require surveillance or minor intervention rather than cancer treatment.

This cluster covers every major component of the cervical health pathway — from understanding what Pap and HPV test results mean, through the colposcopy evaluation that follows abnormal results, through the specific procedures used when treatment of cervical dysplasia is indicated. Each page is designed to replace anxiety with understanding.

The Cervical Health Pathway — From Screening to Diagnosis to Treatment

Understanding how the cervical health pathway works helps contextualize every step within it. Each page in this cluster covers one stage of the pathway in depth.

Cervical Cancer Screening — Pap Test and HPV Test

Cervical cancer screening uses two complementary tests: the Pap test (cervical cytology), which looks for abnormal cervical cells, and the HPV test, which identifies high-risk HPV strains associated with cervical cancer development. Current guidelines recommend a combination of both tests (co-testing) every 5 years for most women aged 30 to 65, or Pap test alone every 3 years for women aged 21 to 29. The screening interval and co-testing versus Pap-alone recommendations are determined by age. Pap vs HPV test explained →

Abnormal Pap Results — What They Mean

Pap test results describe the appearance of cervical cells under a microscope. The most common abnormal results — ASCUS (atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance) and LSIL (low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion) — reflect mild cellular changes that usually resolve without intervention. HSIL (high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion) reflects more significant changes that warrant prompt evaluation. None of these results means cancer — they describe the degree of cellular change on the spectrum between normal and cancer. What abnormal Pap means →

HPV Positive — What Happens Next

A positive HPV test means a high-risk HPV strain is present on the cervix. Most HPV infections clear spontaneously within one to two years. Persistent high-risk HPV is what produces cervical dysplasia and, if untreated, can progress to cervical cancer over years to decades. The management pathway after a positive HPV result depends on which HPV strain is present, the Pap result in combination, and the patient’s history. HPV positive — what’s next →

Colposcopy — The Diagnostic Procedure After Abnormal Results

When a Pap or HPV result warrants further evaluation, colposcopy is the next step. A colposcope is a magnifying instrument used to examine the cervix in detail. Biopsies of any abnormal-appearing areas provide the histologic diagnosis — the definitive assessment of the degree of dysplasia present — that guides management. Colposcopy is a non-surgical office procedure that takes approximately 15 minutes. Colposcopy explained →

Cervical Dysplasia (CIN) — Grading and Management

Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) is the histologic term for cervical dysplasia — precancerous changes in cervical cells identified on biopsy. CIN 1 is low-grade dysplasia that usually regresses spontaneously. CIN 2 and CIN 3 are higher-grade changes that have a meaningful probability of progression to cancer without treatment and are managed with cervical excisional procedures. Cervical dysplasia explained →

LEEP and Cold Knife Conization — Treatment Procedures

LEEP (loop electrosurgical excision procedure) and cold knife conization are the two primary cervical excisional procedures used to treat high-grade cervical dysplasia. Both remove the transformation zone — the region of the cervix where dysplasia arises — to provide both definitive treatment and a histologic specimen for pathologic evaluation. LEEP is performed in the office under local anesthesia. Cold knife conization is performed in the operating room under general or regional anesthesia. LEEP procedure → | Cold knife conization →

When Cervical Health Results Warrant Prompt Follow-Up

Most abnormal cervical screening results are managed through scheduled follow-up appointments. Contact our office promptly if:

  • You received an HSIL or ASC-H result and have not yet scheduled your colposcopy — these results should be evaluated within 4 to 6 weeks
  • You develop new or unexplained vaginal bleeding, particularly postcoital bleeding or postmenopausal bleeding, alongside an abnormal cervical result
  • You have significant new pelvic or lower back pain alongside an abnormal cervical result
Lapeer: (810) 969-4670  ·  Rochester Hills: (248) 923-3522
Cervical Health Care at Lapeer Women’s Health

Cervical health evaluation, colposcopy, and cervical procedures are performed by Dr. Ramona D. Andrei, MD, PhD, FACOG — with a clinical approach that provides thorough explanation alongside thorough evaluation.

Screening and Result Interpretation

Cervical cancer screening is performed at well-woman visits at the intervals recommended by current guidelines. Abnormal results are communicated with a clear explanation of what the result means, what the next step is, and why. No abnormal result should be communicated without adequate explanation of its clinical significance — and that is the standard at Lapeer Women’s Health.

In-Office Colposcopy

Colposcopy is performed in-office at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills locations. The procedure includes a detailed examination of the cervix with the colposcope, application of acetic acid to highlight abnormal areas, and targeted biopsy of any areas of concern. Results are reviewed with the patient and a clear management plan is established based on the biopsy findings.

LEEP and Cervical Procedures

LEEP is performed in-office under local anesthesia. Cold knife conization is performed at our affiliated Michigan hospitals when the clinical indication requires surgical conization. Post-procedural pathology results are reviewed and follow-up surveillance is established based on the final pathologic diagnosis and current guidelines.

An Abnormal Pap Result Is Not a Cancer Diagnosis — It Is an Early Warning That the System Is Working

Every year, thousands of women receive abnormal Pap or HPV results and spend weeks or months in unnecessary fear because the result was not explained clearly. An abnormal result means the cervical screening system detected a change that warrants follow-up. For the vast majority of women, that follow-up confirms a low-grade finding that resolves on its own or is easily treated with an in-office procedure. The outcome of detecting a change early — with clear information, appropriate follow-up, and targeted treatment when needed — is the prevention of cervical cancer. That is exactly what this system is for.

Dr. Ramona D. Andrei and the team at Lapeer Women’s Health are here to provide that follow-up — and the clear explanation that should accompany every step of it — at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices, without a referral required.

Frequently Asked Questions About
Cervical Health and Screening
No. An abnormal Pap test result describes a finding on the spectrum between normal and cancer — and the vast majority of abnormal results are at the low-grade end of that spectrum where cancer is not present and the abnormality often resolves without treatment. ASCUS and LSIL — the most common abnormal results — reflect mild cellular changes that have a very low risk of representing or progressing to cancer. Even HSIL, the highest grade of cytologic abnormality, reflects dysplasia rather than invasive cancer in most cases. The purpose of the evaluation that follows an abnormal result — colposcopy and biopsy — is to precisely characterize the finding and determine whether treatment is needed. At no point in this pathway does an abnormal Pap mean cancer without definitive histologic confirmation.
Abnormal Pap results are common — approximately 3 to 4 million women in the United States receive an abnormal Pap result each year. The majority of these are ASCUS or LSIL, which reflect low-grade changes that are very frequently associated with transient HPV infection and resolve spontaneously. The widespread experience of receiving an abnormal Pap result is part of why clear, thorough explanation at the time of result communication is so important — and why this cluster of pages exists to provide that context.
Human papillomavirus, particularly the high-risk strains HPV 16 and HPV 18, causes cervical cancer by integrating into the DNA of cervical epithelial cells and disrupting the normal cell cycle regulation that prevents uncontrolled cell growth. Most HPV infections are cleared by the immune system within one to two years without causing lasting changes. Persistent infection with high-risk HPV strains — infection that the immune system does not clear — produces progressive dysplastic changes in cervical cells over years to decades that, if not detected and treated, can progress to invasive cervical cancer. The entire cervical screening and treatment system is designed to detect and interrupt this progression at the dysplasia stage, before invasion occurs.
Yes, if you are within the eligible age range for vaccination. The HPV vaccine (Gardasil 9) is now approved for adults up to age 45 and is recommended through age 26 without requiring shared clinical decision-making, and through age 45 with shared decision-making. Prior HPV exposure or an abnormal Pap does not preclude vaccination — the vaccine protects against the HPV strains it covers regardless of prior infection, and most individuals have not been exposed to all nine strains covered by the vaccine. Vaccination after an abnormal Pap does not treat existing dysplasia but may reduce the risk of infection with additional high-risk strains.
Current guidelines recommend: no cervical screening before age 21; Pap test alone every 3 years from age 21 to 29; Pap test plus HPV co-testing every 5 years (preferred) or Pap alone every 3 years from age 30 to 65; and screening may be discontinued after age 65 in women with adequate prior negative screening history. Women with abnormal results, prior high-grade dysplasia, or other risk factors may require more frequent surveillance. The specific recommended interval for your situation is discussed at your well-woman visit at Lapeer Women’s Health.
Yes. Colposcopy and LEEP are 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). Cold knife conization is performed at our affiliated Michigan hospitals. No referral is required to schedule.
Board-certified gynecology & minimally invasive surgery  ·  Most major insurances accepted  ·  Convenient locations in Lapeer & Rochester Hills
Abnormal Pap Results Deserve Clear Explanation and Careful Follow-Up.

Our team at Lapeer Women’s Health provides cervical health evaluation, colposcopy, and cervical procedures at both our Lapeer and Rochester Hills offices. No referral required.

Schedule a Gynecologic Visit

The information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute 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.