Plain-English translation of NCT04783805 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This study is watching what happens to cervical cell changes when doctors monitor them carefully over time instead of jumping straight to surgery. Researchers want to understand whether these changes go away on their own in women who plan to have children in the future, which could help avoid surgery that might affect pregnancy later.
Many younger women are diagnosed with concerning cervical cell changes, but the standard treatment—surgery to remove part of the cervix—might increase the risk of early labor in future pregnancies. Recent research suggests that 40-88% of these changes disappear naturally on their own, especially in younger women, so doctors want to know if careful monitoring could be a safer option for women who haven't finished having their families yet.
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You would come in for regular colposcopy appointments (special exams where doctors look at your cervix closely) and sometimes biopsies to check whether the cell changes are staying the same, getting worse, or going away on their own. The study will follow you over time to see what happens naturally without surgery, and if your condition changes or doesn't improve, you may then have surgery. Researchers are particularly interested in tracking whether these changes resolve completely, partially improve, or persist.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 24, 2026 · Not medical advice
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