More than 180 participants and experts from 31 countries met for the fifth time in 10 years in St. Gallen, Switzerland for a 3-day conference to discuss important current issues of clinical cancer prevention. The meeting was again organized and co-sponsored by St. Gallen Oncology Conferences (SONK). While SONK has been extremely successful in organizing large international c- gresses on âPrimary Therapy of Early Breast Cancerâ as well as âSupportive Care in Cancerâ for more than 20 years, the idea of promoting interdisciplinary, clinically oriented meetings on cancer prevention is a more recent and not yet generally accepted and w- comed concept in modern oncology. Since todayâs medical expenses are soaring and me- cal research budgets are stagnating or even being cut, neither politicians nor industry is willing to risk an additional unpredictable channel of expenses, such as that demanded by clinical cancer prevention efforts! In Switzerlandâand we fear in many other parts of the globeâsome 97%â98% or even a greater percentage of health budgets is spent for curative and palliative/rehabilitative m- icine. Since a meager 2%â3% of national health budgets is for preventive medicine, even less than that proportion is specifically allocated for cancer prevention. When the money for âcuring and caringâ for the diseased populace runs short, there is likely not much left for partly controversial disease prevention in the (still) healthy part of the population.