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Colposcopy Guidance in Goregaon West, Mumbai: Pap Smear, HPV Report & Cervical Screening Advice

Author:

Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Lady Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed

An abnormal Pap smear or HPV-positive report can feel frightening, especially when you are unsure whether colposcopy is needed.
Many women immediately worry about cervical cancer, biopsy, HPV 16, HPV 18, or CIN.
In my clinical experience, most abnormal cervical screening reports need calm interpretation, risk assessment, and the correct next step — not panic.
This guide explains colposcopy, Pap smear results, HPV reports, cervical biopsy, CIN, referral guidance, and follow-up planning.

What Is Colposcopy?

Colposcopy is a magnified examination of the cervix used when Pap smear, HPV testing, or cervical examination suggests further assessment.

Colposcopy is a detailed examination of the cervix using a special magnifying instrument called a colposcope.

It allows the cervix to be examined more closely when a Pap smear, HPV test, or cervical examination suggests that further assessment is required.

Colposcopy may be used to evaluate:

  • cervix
  • vagina
  • vulva, in selected cases

During the procedure, special solutions may be applied to the cervix to highlight abnormal areas.

If a suspicious area is seen, a small biopsy may be taken.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Being advised colposcopy does not mean you have cancer. It means your cervix needs a closer look so the correct diagnosis and follow-up can be planned.

Colposcopy guidance helps you understand whether your Pap smear, HPV report, symptoms, or cervical findings need closer evaluation.

An abnormal Pap smear or HPV-positive report can make you anxious.

You may start wondering:

  • Do I have cervical cancer?
  • Is HPV dangerous?
  • Do I need colposcopy immediately?
  • Is this report serious?
  • What should I do next?

The reassuring point is this:

Most abnormal cervical screening reports do not mean cancer.

Many reports show:

  • mild infection
  • inflammation
  • HPV-related changes
  • low-grade cervical changes
  • early precancerous changes
  • changes that can be monitored or treated properly

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides cervical screening consultation, including:

  • Pap smear report interpretation
  • HPV DNA test interpretation
  • cervical screening guidance
  • evaluation of abnormal cervical findings
  • guidance on whether colposcopy is required
  • referral support when advanced cervical assessment is indicated
  • follow-up planning after colposcopy or biopsy reports

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please do not read one line of the report and assume the worst. The exact Pap result, HPV type, age, symptoms, and previous history decide the next step.

Colposcopy may be advised when Pap smear, HPV testing, symptoms, or cervical examination suggest higher cervical risk.

Colposcopy may be recommended when cervical screening or symptoms suggest the need for a closer look at the cervix.

It may be advised in cases of:

  • abnormal Pap smear report
  • persistent HPV-positive report
  • HPV 16 or HPV 18 positivity
  • ASC-US with high-risk HPV positivity
  • LSIL or HSIL report
  • ASC-H report
  • AGC or glandular cell abnormality
  • suspicious-looking cervix on examination
  • bleeding after intercourse
  • unexplained bleeding between periods
  • persistent cervical erosion with symptoms
  • recurrent unhealthy cervix
  • previous history of CIN
  • follow-up after treatment for cervical precancer

The HPV test looks for the virus that can cause cervical cell changes, while the Pap test looks for precancerous cell changes on the cervix. Both tests help guide cervical cancer prevention and early detection.

Dr. Dimple Doshi helps interpret Pap and HPV reports, assess cervical risk, explain colposcopy need, and guide follow-up or referral.

If your Pap smear or HPV report suggests the need for colposcopy, Dr. Dimple Doshi will help you understand the report, assess your clinical risk, explain the need for further evaluation, and guide you toward the appropriate next step with clarity and confidence.

At Vardaan Hospital, you can consult for:

  • Pap smear testing guidance
  • HPV DNA test interpretation
  • cervical screening consultation
  • evaluation of post-coital bleeding
  • evaluation of persistent vaginal discharge
  • cervical erosion assessment
  • explanation of abnormal Pap smear reports
  • explanation of HPV 16, HPV 18, and high-risk HPV reports
  • guidance on whether colposcopy is required
  • referral support for advanced cervical assessment
  • post-colposcopy report discussion
  • cervical biopsy report interpretation
  • follow-up planning after CIN diagnosis
  • HPV vaccination counselling
  • cervical cancer prevention advice

This approach helps you avoid unnecessary panic and understand the correct medical pathway.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
The goal is not just to “do a test.” The goal is to understand your risk and choose the safest next step.

No. Not every abnormal Pap smear needs immediate colposcopy; the decision depends on HPV status, age, symptoms, and risk.

The decision depends on:

  • your age
  • type of Pap smear abnormality
  • HPV result
  • HPV genotype
  • previous Pap smear history
  • previous HPV test history
  • symptoms
  • pregnancy status
  • immune status
  • clinical examination findings
  • overall risk of significant cervical disease

Modern guidelines use a risk-based approach.

This means the next step is decided according to current reports and previous screening history, not by one report alone.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Some mild abnormalities need repeat testing, while higher-risk results need faster evaluation. The correct pathway depends on the full report, not just the word “abnormal.”

Pap and HPV reports may show low-risk changes, high-risk changes, HPV infection, inadequate sample, or need for closer cervical assessment.

Report Finding

What It May Suggest

Possible Next Step

ASC-US

Minor cell changes

HPV test or repeat testing depending on age and history

LSIL

Low-grade HPV-related change

Repeat testing or colposcopy depending on risk

HSIL

Higher-grade abnormality

Colposcopy usually advised

ASC-H

Cannot rule out high-grade lesion

Colposcopy usually advised

AGC

Glandular cell abnormality

Detailed evaluation required

HPV positive, Pap normal

HPV present, cells normal

Follow-up depends on HPV type and history

HPV 16 / HPV 18 positive

Higher-risk HPV type

Colposcopy may be advised

Unsatisfactory smear

Sample not adequate

Repeat Pap smear may be needed

HPV-positive means high-risk HPV has been detected, but it does not automatically mean cervical cancer.

A positive HPV report does not mean cervical cancer.

HPV infection is common.

In many women, the immune system clears HPV naturally.

However, some high-risk HPV types, especially HPV 16 and HPV 18, may persist and increase the risk of cervical precancer over time.

You need proper interpretation of:

  • HPV type
  • Pap smear result
  • age
  • symptoms
  • previous screening history
  • cervical examination findings
  • pregnancy status
  • immune status

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
HPV positive does not mean cancer. It means we need to understand the HPV type, persistence risk, Pap result, and correct follow-up plan.

Bleeding after sex, persistent watery discharge, foul discharge, abnormal Pap smear, HPV positivity, or unhealthy cervix need evaluation.

You should consult a gynecologist if you have:

  • bleeding after intercourse
  • bleeding between periods
  • persistent watery discharge
  • foul-smelling vaginal discharge
  • blood-stained discharge
  • recurrent cervical erosion
  • cervix looking unhealthy on examination
  • pelvic pain with discharge
  • pain during intercourse
  • HPV-positive report
  • abnormal Pap smear report
  • previous CIN history
  • previous cervical biopsy report needing explanation

These symptoms do not always mean serious disease.

But they need proper evaluation.

Abnormal Pap smear or HPV-positive report?
Do not panic, but do not ignore it.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for cervical screening guidance and next-step planning.

Pap smear checks cervical cells, while colposcopy visually examines the cervix under magnification when further assessment is needed.

Pap Smear

Colposcopy

Screening test

Diagnostic evaluation

Cells are collected from the cervix

Cervix is seen under magnification

Detects abnormal cervical cells

Helps locate abnormal areas

Usually done as routine cervical screening

Done when further assessment is needed

Does not provide tissue diagnosis

Biopsy can be taken if required

A Pap smear tells us whether abnormal cells may be present.

Colposcopy helps identify where the abnormal area may be.

Biopsy confirms what the tissue diagnosis is.

During colposcopy, the cervix is viewed under magnification, special solutions are applied, and biopsy may be taken if needed.

A colposcopy is usually an outpatient procedure.

The usual steps include:

  • speculum examination
  • magnified visualization of the cervix
  • application of acetic acid solution
  • sometimes iodine application
  • identification of abnormal areas
  • biopsy if required
  • endocervical sampling in selected cases

You may feel mild pressure or cramping.

If biopsy is taken, light spotting may occur for a few days.

Colposcopy itself is usually not very painful, but mild pressure, burning, cramps, or spotting may occur, especially if biopsy is taken.

You may feel:

  • mild pressure due to speculum
  • slight burning after solution application
  • mild cramps if biopsy is taken
  • light spotting after biopsy

Most women can return to routine activity soon.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Fear of pain is common. Most women tolerate colposcopy well, and knowing what to expect can reduce anxiety.

A cervical biopsy is a small tissue sample from the cervix that confirms whether changes are inflammation, CIN, or rarely cancer.

A cervical biopsy means taking a small tissue sample from an abnormal-looking area of the cervix.

It helps diagnose:

  • chronic cervicitis
  • HPV-related changes
  • CIN 1
  • CIN 2
  • CIN 3
  • glandular abnormalities
  • suspicious cervical lesions
  • rarely, cervical cancer

Biopsy gives a more definite diagnosis than Pap smear alone.

CIN means cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, a precancerous cervical cell change diagnosed on biopsy, not Pap smear alone.

CIN refers to abnormal cervical cell changes that may be precancerous.

CIN Grade

Meaning

CIN 1

Mild change; often monitored

CIN 2

Moderate precancerous change

CIN 3

Severe precancerous change

CIS

Carcinoma in situ; high-grade preinvasive disease

CIN is not the same as cancer.

But higher-grade CIN needs timely management to reduce the risk of progression.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
CIN is a warning stage. The purpose of follow-up and treatment is to prevent progression before invasive cancer develops.

After colposcopy or biopsy, the next step may be observation, repeat Pap/HPV testing, infection treatment, LEEP, cone biopsy, or referral.

After colposcopy or biopsy, your next step depends on the report.

Management may include:

  • observation
  • repeat Pap smear
  • repeat HPV test
  • co-testing
  • infection treatment
  • cervicitis treatment
  • LEEP / LLETZ
  • cone biopsy
  • follow-up after CIN treatment
  • referral to gynecologic oncology if needed

Dr. Dimple Doshi can help you understand your report and plan the correct follow-up pathway.

Before colposcopy, carry reports, avoid vaginal creams or intercourse as advised, avoid heavy bleeding days, and inform if pregnant.

If you are advised colposcopy, you may be asked to:

  • carry your Pap smear report
  • carry your HPV DNA test report
  • carry previous biopsy or treatment records
  • avoid intercourse for 24–48 hours before the test
  • avoid vaginal creams or pessaries before the test unless prescribed
  • avoid scheduling during heavy bleeding
  • inform the doctor if you are pregnant
  • inform about blood thinners
  • ask whether biopsy may be needed

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Bring all previous Pap, HPV, biopsy, or treatment reports. Cervical screening decisions depend strongly on report history.

Colposcopy may be advised during pregnancy for higher-risk reports, but biopsy and treatment decisions are made very carefully.

Colposcopy may be advised during pregnancy if the Pap smear or HPV report indicates significant risk.

Evaluation during pregnancy is done more carefully.

Biopsy is usually reserved for situations where there is a strong clinical indication.

Treatment for precancerous lesions is often deferred until after delivery unless cancer is suspected.

Pregnant women with abnormal cervical screening reports should not panic but should follow proper medical guidance.

Cervical cancer can often be prevented with Pap smear, HPV testing, HPV vaccination, timely colposcopy when advised, and treatment of CIN.

Cervical cancer is one of the few cancers where screening can detect precancerous changes before cancer develops.

Prevention includes:

  • regular Pap smear
  • HPV testing when indicated
  • HPV vaccination
  • timely follow-up of abnormal reports
  • colposcopy when advised
  • biopsy when needed
  • treatment of high-grade precancerous lesions
  • avoiding missed follow-up

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Cervical cancer prevention works only when screening reports are followed up. Please do not keep an abnormal report in a file without review.

Colposcopy myths can create fear; colposcopy is usually a closer cervical assessment, not a cancer diagnosis.

Myth

Fact

“Colposcopy means I have cancer.”

No. It is usually advised to assess abnormal screening results more clearly.

“HPV positive means cancer.”

No. HPV is common, but persistent high-risk HPV needs follow-up.

“Abnormal Pap smear always needs surgery.”

No. Many mild abnormalities only need monitoring.

“Biopsy spreads cancer.”

No. Biopsy helps confirm the diagnosis.

“No symptoms means no cervical problem.”

Cervical precancer may be silent, so screening is important.

“Pap smear and colposcopy are the same.”

No. Pap smear is a screening test; colposcopy is a magnified diagnostic evaluation.

“HPV vaccine means Pap smear is not needed.”

Screening is still needed according to age and guidelines.

Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi if your Pap smear is abnormal, HPV is positive, HPV 16/18 is detected, or colposcopy has been advised.

You should book a consultation if:

  • your Pap smear report is abnormal
  • your HPV test is positive
  • HPV 16 or HPV 18 is detected
  • you have bleeding after intercourse
  • you have persistent vaginal discharge
  • your cervix looked unhealthy during examination
  • you have been advised colposcopy and feel anxious
  • you need explanation of CIN report
  • you need guidance after cervical biopsy
  • you want cervical cancer screening advice
  • you want HPV vaccination guidance

Dr. Dimple Doshi provides ethical cervical screening guidance, Pap/HPV report interpretation, referral advice, and follow-up planning.

Patients choose Dr. Dimple Doshi for:

  • senior lady gynecologist consultation
  • cervical screening guidance
  • abnormal Pap smear explanation
  • HPV-positive report counselling
  • HPV 16 and HPV 18 report interpretation
  • cervical erosion assessment
  • post-coital bleeding evaluation
  • colposcopy-related counselling
  • referral guidance when advanced cervical assessment is needed
  • post-colposcopy or biopsy report discussion
  • CIN follow-up planning
  • cervical cancer prevention advice

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s approach is calm, ethical, clear, and patient-focused.

Vardaan Hospital offers private, women-focused cervical screening consultation and follow-up guidance in Goregaon West, Mumbai.

Patients choose Vardaan Hospital for:

  • convenient Goregaon West location
  • accessibility for Malad, Jogeshwari, Kandivali, Andheri, and nearby suburbs
  • privacy-focused gynecology consultation
  • cervical screening support
  • Pap smear and HPV testing guidance
  • vaginal discharge and bleeding evaluation
  • cervical health counselling
  • follow-up support after abnormal reports

The cost depends on consultation, Pap smear, HPV DNA test, cervical infection tests, referral needs, biopsy report review, and follow-up planning.

Cost may vary depending on:

  • consultation
  • pelvic examination
  • Pap smear testing
  • HPV DNA testing
  • vaginal infection tests
  • cervical screening review
  • report interpretation
  • referral guidance
  • post-colposcopy report discussion
  • follow-up visits

For accurate cost guidance, consultation and report review are required first.

Colposcopy is usually advised to clarify abnormal screening findings; it does not automatically mean cancer.

The most important points are:

  • Abnormal Pap smear does not always mean cancer.
  • HPV positive does not always mean cancer.
  • HPV 16 and HPV 18 need closer attention.
  • Not every abnormal Pap smear needs colposcopy.
  • Colposcopy helps examine the cervix more closely.
  • Biopsy confirms tissue diagnosis when needed.
  • CIN is a precancerous change, not invasive cancer.
  • Follow-up should not be missed.
  • Screening and HPV vaccination help prevent cervical cancer.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
The safest approach is calm, structured follow-up. Do not panic after an abnormal report, but do not delay medical guidance either.

Q1. Does Dr. Dimple Doshi guide patients for colposcopy?

Ans. Yes. Dr. Dimple Doshi helps patients understand abnormal Pap smear or HPV reports, explains when colposcopy may be advised, and guides them for appropriate further evaluation and follow-up care.

Q2. Why was I advised colposcopy?

Ans. Colposcopy may be advised when Pap smear, HPV test, or cervical examination suggests that the cervix needs closer assessment.

It helps identify abnormal areas more clearly.

Q3. Does abnormal Pap smear mean cancer?

Ans. No. Most abnormal Pap smear reports are due to inflammation, HPV infection, or precancerous changes.

Proper follow-up is important.

Q4. Is HPV-positive report serious?

Ans. It depends on the HPV type, Pap smear result, age, persistence, and previous history.

HPV 16 and HPV 18 need closer attention.

Q5. Can HPV go away on its own?

Ans. Yes. Many HPV infections clear naturally, especially in younger women.

Persistent high-risk HPV needs monitoring.

Q6. Is colposcopy painful?

Ans. Colposcopy usually causes mild discomfort.

If biopsy is taken, you may have mild cramps or spotting.

Q7. Can colposcopy be done during periods?

Ans. It is usually avoided during heavy bleeding because the cervix may not be clearly visible.

Your doctor can guide the best timing.

Q8. What is the difference between Pap smear and colposcopy?

Ans. Pap smear checks cervical cells under a microscope.

Colposcopy allows magnified visual examination of the cervix and biopsy if required.

Q9. What if biopsy shows CIN 1?

Ans. CIN 1 is usually a low-grade change.

It may be monitored depending on age, HPV status, and medical history.

Q10. What if biopsy shows CIN 2 or CIN 3?

Ans. CIN 2 or CIN 3 usually needs specialist management and treatment planning to prevent progression.

Your doctor will guide the next step based on your full report and clinical context.

Q11. Can Dr. Dimple Doshi explain my colposcopy or biopsy report?

Ans. Yes. You can consult Dr. Dimple Doshi for report explanation, follow-up planning, treatment guidance, and referral advice if required.

Conclusion

An abnormal Pap smear, HPV-positive report, or advice for colposcopy can feel stressful, but it does not automatically mean cervical cancer.
Most cervical screening abnormalities can be managed safely when reports are interpreted correctly and follow-up is done on time.

In my clinical experience, women feel calmer when they understand whether they need repeat testing, HPV follow-up, colposcopy, biopsy, CIN treatment, or referral care.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides cervical screening consultation, Pap smear and HPV report interpretation, colposcopy-related counselling, referral support, biopsy report explanation, CIN follow-up planning, and HPV vaccination guidance.

If your Pap smear or HPV report suggests the need for colposcopy, Dr. Dimple Doshi will help you understand the report, assess your clinical risk, explain the need for further evaluation, and guide you toward the appropriate next step with clarity and confidence.

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