The natural history of HPV-related disease still is poorly understood. Screening of apparently healthy populations suggests that most HPV exposure results only in latent infection; that is, there is no active HPV DNA replication, but the HPV copy number is held at a steady state because viral replication parallels cell division. Unfortunately, knowledge of the cell-virus interaction and the host-immune response has not yet provided an effective medical therapy or a preventive vaccine. Rather, the management of HPV-induced disease remains rooted to the strategy of repeated local destruction. The physician should work methodically through a series of strategic decisions before committing to a management plan.