bInfection with high-risk (HR) human papillomavirus (HPV) genotypes is an important risk factor for cervical cancers. We evaluated the clinical performances of two new real-time PCR assays for detecting HR HPVs compared to that of the Hybrid Capture 2 test (HC2). A total of 356 cervical swab specimens, which had been examined for cervical cytology, were assayed by Abbott RealTime HR and Roche Cobas HPV as well as HC2. Sensitivities and specificities of these assays were determined based on the criteria that concordant results among the three assays were regarded as true-positive or -negative and that the results of genotyping and sequencing were considered true findings when the HPV assays presented discrepant results. The overall concordance rate among the results for the three assays was 82.6%, and RealTime HR and Cobas HPV assays agreed with HC2 in 86.1% and 89.9% of cases, respectively. The two real-time PCR assays agreed with each other for 89.6% of the samples, and the concordance rate between them was equal to or greater than 98.0% for detecting HPV type 16 or 18. HC2 demonstrated a sensitivity of 96.6% with a specificity of 89.1% for detecting HR HPVs, while RealTime HR presented a sensitivity of 78.3% with a specificity of 99.2%. The sensitivity and specificity of Cobas HPV for detecting HR HPVs were 91.7% and 97.0%. The new real-time PCR assays exhibited lower sensitivities for detecting HR HPVs than that of HC2. Nevertheless, the newly introduced assays have an advantage of simultaneously identifying HPV types 16 and 18 from clinical samples. P ersistent cervical infection of human papillomavirus (HPV) is a well-known risk factor for developing cervical cancer, which is the second most common malignancy in women, causing approximately 250,000 deaths each year worldwide (35, 36). More than 150 HPV genotypes have been identified, and approximately 50 of them are known to infect cervical epithelia. Recently, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) defined 12 high-risk (HR) HPV genotypes (HPV types 16,18,31,33,35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, and 59) as group 1 carcinogens (3). In particular, HPV16 is known as the most common HPV type, contributing to approximately half of all invasive cervical cancer cases. This genotype is also known to demonstrate a biological advantage in transmission, persistence, and transformation (2). HPV18 has been reported as the second most common cause of HPV-associated invasive cervical cancers, and the proportion of cervical cancers related to HPV16 and/or HPV18 has been reported to be between 68% and 82% (19).Morphological examination of cervix cytology has been used as a screening test for the prevention and early detection of cervical cancers over the past 50 years (12, 13). A major target of the cervical screening is to detect cases of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 (CIN3), which can be treated before it progresses to invasive cancer. However, cytology tests are limited in predicting HPV infections and cervical cancers. Abnormal findings in cervic...