Abstract Background HPV is among the most important infections associated with cancers in men and women, including cervical cancer which is the second most common cancer affecting women aged 15-44 years in the EU. Yet, data on vaccine uptake, HPV infection rates and incidence of related cancers is lacking across Europe, obstructing policymakers’ ability to build adequate prevention strategies towards the EU’s goal of eliminating HPV-related cancers. Methods Vaccines Europe analysed the landscape of data collection practices for HPV, highlighting discrepancies across Europe as well as successful initiatives. Results Our analysis reveals stark gaps in data collection across Europe. Some countries do not report disease levels and vaccination coverage for HPV. When reporting does occur, methods and timelines often differ between countries. Limited data availability exists for vaccination uptake in boys and young adults. This lack of standardisation hinders the comparability and reliability of collected data. It also impedes the integration and analysis of data within and across countries, hindering the development of effective elimination strategies. Concrete actions are needed at EU and national level to further develop and strengthen data collection, sharing and use in decision-making. Our research calls on strengthening ECDC’s role, promoting best practice sharing between countries, ensuring sustained resource allocation for data systems/surveillance, establishing electronic vaccination registries, an EU implementation roadmap to support countries in achieving the objectives of Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan, and translating data into policy recommendations. The Council Recommendation on vaccine-preventable cancers provides a framework for EU Member States to establish electronic vaccination registries and the ECDC to develop an HPV dashboard by the end of 2024. Key messages • Current data collection practices leave Europeans more vulnerable in the fight against cancer. • Robust data can guide policy and support elimination strategies for vaccine-preventable cancers.
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