answer:The labs can easily differ or be wrong. Not comforting I know. My guess is your negative result was wrong after listening to the entire story. It has been suggested that monogamous young people only need a PAP once every three years, because positive results often resolve on their own, and “surgery” isn’t necessary. Even with poor eating habits you are young, basically healthy, and probably have good immune system. Eating better is always a good thing, but do not rely on nutrition to cure you from cancer. You have abnormal cells right now, not cancer if I understand correctly. Did you have an actual HPV test done? Or, just a PAP. Also, have you had a sample sent to a different lab? Under a microscope simple inflammation caused by other problems can be diagnosed as probable HPV when it isn’t. I had this happen to me when I was having vulvar tissue problems. When a biopsy was sent to an expert they found no HPV. This was the exact same piece of tissue. However, there is specific genetic HPV testing and that should be accurate. That is different than a lab tech looking through a microscope. I would not wait too long for it to disappear. The longer you wait the more extensive the removal might be. It seems to me you have had it for two years now. Millions of women get the area treated and still have babies. I guess you would need to know the risks with your particular situation. Get a second opinion and a different lab I think. Then you can make a decision. Did the doctor do a culposcopy? Disclaimer: I’m not a doctor.