Is cervical hyperplasia a precursor to cancer?

  Cervical hyperplasia is not a precursor of cancer. Cervical hyperplasia is an inflammatory and proliferative pathological change caused by the stimulation of chronic cervical inflammation, which is a benign lesion and will not become cancerous, so it is not a precursor of cancer.  Cervical hyperplasia is an enlargement of the cervix caused by repeated stimulation of chronic cervical inflammation, and is not a malignant lesion of the cells in the cervix. If cervical hyperplasia is not combined with cervical erosion, cervical polyp and other lesions, it usually has no obvious clinical manifestations and will not affect normal menstruation, sex life and fertility, so no special treatment is needed. If cervical hyperplasia is combined with cervical polyps and cervical erosion, symptoms such as cervical contact bleeding, yellowish leucorrhea, itching and odor in the pubic area may appear, which need to be treated in time.  Cervical hyperplasia is not a precancerous lesion, so patients do not need to worry too much, but they should be reviewed regularly. Women over 30 years old should undergo annual cervical cancer screening to exclude the possibility of cancer.