“…And we observed that HPV 18 could be detected as co-infection with other high risk types and all of low risk type was never found as single infection in this study. Although the most three common HPV typedistribution in vulva and Vaginal in our study showed slightly different from the other reports (Ramet et al, 2010;ICO WHO Information center, 2014;Hampl et al, 2007;Baldez da Silva et al, 2012), due to the different HPV detection methods, amount or type of sample collection, population characteristic, etc, but there are several studied reported which found that high risk HPV type such as HPV 16,18,31,33,35,45,51,52,56 or 58 have been associated with vulva, vagina, penis, anus or cervical cancers and abnormal lesions (Giuliano et al, 2008;Baldez da Silva et al, 2012;Hampl et al, 2007;De Vuyst et al, 2009 Otherwise, the variety of population group, sample selection and histological diagnosis results were to be the important factors which were used to be considerable (Hampl et al, 2006;Giuliano et al, 2008) This finding demonstrated that HPV 16 was the most common HPV type present in vulva and Vaginal tissues with abnormal cytology lesions and cancer cells while HPV 18 and the other types showed less frequently for both organs from Thai women and the HPV type distribution of vulva and Vaginal were not variety as cervical cells. However, it is interesting baseline data on HPV prevalence of vulva and Vaginal abnormal/cancer from Thai women, which there are limited evidences available and both of these cancers are more less frequency compared to cervical cancer, although the sample size in this study was small and did not represented overall incidence and prevalence of Thai women population.…”