Abstract Introduction WHO wants to achieve the elimination of Cervical Cancer: all countries must achieve and maintain an incidence rate of less than 4 per 100,000 women. Three key pillars: 90% of girls fully vaccinated against HPV by 15 years of age; 70% of women aged 35-45 years screened; 90% of women with pre-tumour lesion and invasive tumour treated. Our study assessed the position of the Tuscany South East Local Health Authority(LHA TSE) with respect to these three pillars and how to improve it. Methods A retrospective observational study was conducted. The following were used: ISTAT data of incidence of cervical cancer standardised by age from 2013 to 2017;data from ISPRO on screening(PAP and HPV test)from 2013 to 2022;data of vaccination coverage taken from the Health Information System of Collective Prevention(SISPC) from 2012 to 2023 for children<12 years, Results The incidence rate of cervical cancer in LHA TSE is 9.4 per 100 thousand. About HPV vaccine coverage by age 12, for girls it has been rising from 80.5% in 2012 to a peak of 84.8% in 2019 and then progressively decreasing to 76.3% in 2023.Coverage for boys has also been progressively increasing from 0.8% in 2012 to a peak in 2019 of 74.9% and then decreasing to 69.8% in 2023. A total of 52 thousand children are vaccinated. As for the adjusted adherence to screening, we started from an average adherence of 51.8% in 2013 (75 thousand women invited with 102% coverage) to 53.2% in 2022 (54 thousand women invited with 107% coverage). In 2013, ASC-US+ lesions were found in 6.4 % of women by PAP Test and in 2022 in 6.3 % of women. In the examined period, more than 90% of women with pre-tumour lesion and more than 90% with invasive tumour were treated. Conclusions LHA TSE will have to implement actions to increase vaccination coverage and screening adherence rates through awareness campaigns and open days, also considering whether a change in the age range for starting screening is necessary as vaccination coverage increases. Key messages • Cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers, but too few young women are vaccinated against HPV infection, the main causative factor. • Prevention through adherence to screening enables early identification of lesions caused by HPV virus.