HPV, known as human papillomavirus, infects the body and often causes papular or verrucous hyperplastic lesions such as flat warts, common warts, condyloma acuminata, or verrucous epidermal dysplasia. More than 40 HPV subtypes are found in the anal and genital areas and mainly cause condyloma acuminatum. High-risk HPV subtypes can cause precancerous lesions or cancers of the skin and mucous membranes, such as cervical cancer or penile cancer, when they infect the body. Condyloma acuminatum is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases in STD clinics and is caused by HPV virus in the genital area. So, what are some characteristics of the current status of genital HPV infection? Genital HPV infection status has some features as follows: 1. Genital HPV infection is very common and many HPV subtypes are transmitted through sexual contact, mainly occurring during vaginal intercourse and anal intercourse. It can also be transmitted through oral sex. 2. Most sexually active adults become infected with HPV at some point in their lives, but most people never know it because such infections often have no signs or symptoms. 3. HPV infections clear up naturally in most cases and do not cause any health problems. However, some infections do progress to warts, precancerous lesions and cancer. 4. The HPV subtypes that cause condyloma acuminatum are different from those that cause anogenital cancer. 5, within existing sexual partners, a diagnosis of HPV infection when both partners are often infected, although there can be no manifestation of infection. 6. Current treatment is primarily directed at the disease caused by HPV (such as condyloma acuminatum warts), not the virus itself.