Can you live a long life with high risk HPV?

In fact, the majority of people who get HPV will have no symptoms. In some cases, the virus may lie dormant for years before resulting in any obvious health issues. Those living with it long term must cope with a higher risk for certain cancers and other potential health effects, such as genital warts.
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Can you live long with HPV?

In most cases (9 out of 10), HPV goes away on its own within two years without health problems. But when HPV does not go away, it can cause health problems like genital warts and cancer. Genital warts usually appear as a small bump or group of bumps in the genital area.
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Does HPV high-risk last longer?

High-risk HPV types

Infection with HPV is very common. In most people, the body is able to clear the infection on its own. But sometimes, the infection doesn't go away. Chronic, or long-lasting infection, especially when it's caused by certain high-risk HPV types, can cause cancer over time.
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Does everyone with high-risk HPV get cancer?

Most HPV infections don't cause cancer: Your immune system usually controls HPV infections so they don't cause cancer. High-risk HPV infections that persist can cause cancer: Sometimes HPV infections are not successfully controlled by your immune system.
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Should I be worried if I have high risk HPV?

High-risk HPV can cause cervical cancer, penile cancer, anal cancer, and cancers of the mouth and throat. It's also a great idea to get the HPV vaccine. Getting the HPV vaccine can help prevent certain types of cancer and genital warts.
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How long does HPV take to turn into cancer?

HPV-related cancers often take years to develop after getting an HPV infection. Cervical cancer usually develops over 10 or more years. There can be a long interval between being infected with HPV, the development of abnormal cells on the cervix and the development of cervical cancer.
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Does high-risk HPV mean cancer?

The types of HPV that can cause cancer are called high-risk HPV. (Other types of HPV can cause warts, like genital warts. These types are called low-risk HPV and do NOT lead to cancer.) Most people with HPV don't know they have it, because there are usually no symptoms.
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What does it mean if you test positive for high-risk HPV?

Results from your HPV test will come back as either positive or negative. Positive HPV test. A positive test result means that you have a type of high-risk HPV that's linked to cervical cancer. It doesn't mean that you have cervical cancer now, but it's a warning sign that cervical cancer could develop in the future.
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How do you manage high-risk HPV?

What's the treatment for high-risk HPV
  1. Colposcopy — a procedure to look more closely at the cervix to see if there are precancerous cells.
  2. Cryotherapy — a treatment to freeze and remove precancerous cells from the cervix.
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Can high-risk HPV come back?

There's no guarantee that genital warts won't grow back again because HPV changes the cells of your body in a way that makes them likely to grow. If you have high-risk HPV that sticks around or goes dormant and keeps coming back, that's when it becomes cancer causing (or what doctors call oncogenic).
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Why have I had HPV for 3 years?

If you still have HPV after 3 years, you may need to have a colposcopy. You'll be asked to have a colposcopy. Information: HPV is a common virus and most people will get it at some point.
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Can your body clear HPV after 5 years?

For 90 percent of women with HPV, the condition will clear up on its own within two years. Only a small number of women who have one of the HPV strains that cause cervical cancer will ever actually develop the disease.
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Can you live with HPV 16?

Overall survival at 5 years was 91% among women with HPV 18 and 96% among those without this virus type (p = 0.133). Among the women with HPV 16, the overall survival was 94%, whereas this rate was 96% among those without this virus type (p = 0.663).
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How do you get rid of chronic HPV?

Treatment
  1. Salicylic acid. Over-the-counter treatments that contain salicylic acid work by removing layers of a wart a little at a time. ...
  2. Imiquimod. This prescription cream might enhance your immune system's ability to fight HPV . ...
  3. Podofilox. ...
  4. Trichloroacetic acid.
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Can you clear HPV after 30?

There is no cure for HPV, but 70% to 90% of infections are cleared by the immune system and become undetectable. HPV peaks in young women around age of sexual debut and declines in the late 20s and 30s. But women's risk for HPV is not over yet: There is sometimes a second peak around the age of menopause.
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What causes high-risk HPV?

Factors that increase the risk of HPV include: having several sexual partners. having sex with someone who has had several sexual partners. having sex without using barrier protection, such as a condom or dental dam.
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Do I need a colposcopy if I have HPV?

If you test positive for HPV 16/18, you will need to have a colposcopy. If you test positive for HPV (but did not have genotyping performed or had genotyping and tested negative for 16/18), you will likely have a colposcopy.
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What percentage of HPV 16 turns into cancer?

In part, that is because some HPV types are much more cancer-causing than others. In fact, one type—type 16—is thought to cause more than 90 percent of all HPV-driven oropharyngeal cancers.
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What are the signs of HPV cancer?

Symptoms of early-stage cervical cancer may include:
  • irregular blood spotting or light bleeding between periods in women of reproductive age;
  • postmenopausal spotting or bleeding;
  • bleeding after sexual intercourse; and.
  • increased vaginal discharge, sometimes foul smelling.
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What are the symptoms of Stage 1 cervical cancer?

Signs and symptoms of stage 1 cervical cancer can include:
  • Watery or bloody vaginal discharge that may be heavy and can have a foul odor.
  • Vaginal bleeding after intercourse, between menstrual periods or after menopause.
  • Menstrual periods may be heavier and last longer than normal.
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Is HPV cancer curable?

The Cure Rate Is Very High

“If a patient's tumor is HPV-positive, the longterm cure rate for most stages is 80 to 90 percent,” reports Dr. Hu, professor in the Departments of Radiation Oncology and Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery.
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What is other high-risk HPV?

High-risk. High-risk HPV strains include HPV 16 and 18, which cause about 70% of cervical cancers. Other high-risk human papillomaviruses include 31, 33, 45, 52, 58, and a few others. Low-risk HPV strains, such as HPV 6 and 11, cause about 90% of genital warts, which rarely develop into cancer.
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Can you have HPV for 6 years?

Depending on the type of HPV that you have, the virus can linger in your body for years. In most cases, your body can produce antibodies against the virus and clear the virus within one to two years. Most strains of HPV go away permanently without treatment.
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What if HPV lasts longer than 2 years?

Most people clear the virus on their own in one to two years with little or no symptoms. But in some people the infection persists. The longer HPV persists the more likely it is to lead to cancer, including cancers of the cervix, penis, anus, mouth and throat.
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