Do abnormal cells come back after LEEP?

A LEEP procedure is exceptionally effective at removing any abnormal or precancerous cells from your cervix. However, depending upon your individual situation, it is possible that abnormal cells will return again, which is why we want to have follow-up appointments and regular cervical cancer screenings with you.
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What are the chances of abnormal cells returning after LEEP?

After treatment for cell changes: about 9 in 10 (90%) people will not have cell changes again. fewer than 2 in 10 (between 5% and 15%) people may have cell changes that come back.
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Do cervical cells grow back after LEEP?

This may be done with a small knife, an electric wire (LEEP), or with a laser. The removed tissue is then sent to the laboratory. The laboratory studies the tissue and makes sure the abnormal cells have been cut away. New tissue grows back in the cervix in four to six weeks.
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Can abnormal cells come back after a LEEP procedure?

LEEP works very well to treat abnormal cell changes on the cervix. If all of the abnormal tissue is removed, you won't need more surgery. In some studies, doctors were able to remove all the abnormal cells in almost every case. But abnormal cells may come back in the future.
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Does HPV come back after LEEP?

Results. In our study, the rate of persistent infection from HPV 16, after LEEP, was 15.9% (29/182) with 94% (17/18) of the recurring disease occurring within 18 months of follow up.
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Danielle Was Diagnosed With HPV and Shares Her Story in Preventing Cervical Cancer



Can you have a second LEEP procedure?

If the margins are positive, you may need a repeat procedure. In addition, six months following a LEEP, you'll have a follow-up appointment that includes Pap and HPV tests. In some cases, abnormal cells are found again. If this happens, you may require another LEEP.
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Why does HPV keep coming 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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What is the next step after a LEEP procedure?

The most common next step after a LEEP procedure is to get a pap smear in six months. It is Really Important to get a follow-up pap smear, after the LEEP procedure.
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Will LEEP get rid of HPV?

Although LEEP does not completely eradicate HPV infection, our results indicate that most HR-HPV infections are cleared after LEEP with negative margins. The clearance rate is increasing gradually after surgery. Our persistence rate was 40.9 % at 6 months, 20 % at 12 months and 11.8 % at 18 months.
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How successful are LEEP procedures?

Loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP) is a common treatment for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), with success rates of 60 to 95 percent reported.
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What happens if LEEP procedure doesn't work?

If LEEP doesn't remove all of the abnormal cells, you may have to have LEEP again, or your doctor or nurse may recommend more tests or a different treatment.
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Can persistent HPV go away?

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. Because of this, it isn't uncommon to contract and clear the virus completely without ever knowing that you had it.
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How long before HPV causes abnormal cells?

In fact, once cells in the cervix begin to undergo abnormal changes, it can take several years for the cells to grow into invasive cervical cancer. Many women experience precancerous changes in the cervix in their 20s and 30s, though the average woman with cervical cancer is diagnosed in her 50s.
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How often is LEEP successful?

According to a study by the Journal of Minimally Invasive Therapy and Allied Technologies, the LEEP procedure is exceptionally effective, maintaining a 93 to 100 percent success rate.
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How often does CIN 2 come back?

The reason for conization was CIN2 in 32.7% of patients and CIN3 in 66.9% of patients. Overall, 175 women received a second conization within the first 5 years after primary treatment, for a recurrence rate of 6%.
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How do I get rid of persistent HPV 16?

If your doctor decides to treat the abnormal cells, they may use one of these methods:
  1. Cryotherapy. This involves freezing the abnormal cells with liquid nitrogen or carbon dioxide.
  2. Conization. This procedure removes the abnormal areas.
  3. Laser therapy. ...
  4. Loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP).
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Is CIN 3 precancerous cells?

CIN 3 is not cancer, but may become cancer and spread to nearby normal tissue if not treated. Treatment for CIN 3 may include cryotherapy, laser therapy, loop electrosurgical procedure (LEEP), or cone biopsy to remove or destroy the abnormal tissue. CIN 3 is sometimes called high-grade or severe dysplasia.
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Can reactivated HPV clear?

In up to 90% of cases, the infection “clears” within 1 or 2 years, meaning that specific HPV types cannot be detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays of cervical or vaginal swab samples [1].
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Can you get the same strain of HPV twice?

For most people who become infected with genital HPV, the infection will clear on its own. Once a person has been exposed to a specific type of HPV, they cannot be reinfected with the same type again, but can be infected with other types of the virus.
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What will LEEP results show?

The purpose of a LEEP is to extract abnormal cells for further testing. The results will inform a doctor about whether a person has an underlying illness and what steps they should take next. A LEEP can help distinguish between precancerous cells and other abnormal cell types, such as polyps.
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Should I get a hysterectomy if I have precancerous cells?

If the precancerous disease is more extensive or involves adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS), and the woman has completed childbearing, a total hysterectomy may be recommended. 1 During a total hysterectomy, the entire uterus (including the cervix) is removed.
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How common is LEEP?

Loop electrosurgical excision procedure (LEEP) is a common treatment for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), with success rates of 60 to 95 percent reported.
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Will I always test positive for HPV?

People often never know they have caught it or passed it on. “HPV could've been there for years before it shows up, if it ever does,” says Ramondetta. When talking to your partner about your diagnosis, remember 80% of people will have HPV at some point in their life.
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What causes HPV to flare up?

– there's no evidence that HPV has triggers like herpes or asthma that cause flare ups, but many believe that a weakened immune system can lead to outbreaks being more likely. Genital warts are more likely to flare-up if your immune system is not able to effectively fight the HPV infection causing them to appear.
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Can you keep passing HPV back and forth?

Most sexually active couples share HPV until the immune response suppresses the infection. Partners who are sexually intimate only with each other are not likely to pass the same virus back and forth.
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