When a woman has a colposcopic cervical biopsy, the report of the biopsy usually describes the pathology specimen as grayish-white tissue. The grayish-white tissue is not necessarily cancerous; it may be normal cervical tissue, or it may be cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. So you can’t judge whether it is cervical cancer simply by the grayish-white tissue, but you need to look at the following conclusion description of the specific nature of its tissue to make a judgment. If the grayish-white tissue is said to be CIN, it is a cervical lesion, and if the grayish-white tissue is chronic inflammation, it is normal cervical tissue. If squamous or adenocarcinoma cells are found, then it is cervical cancer.