A hundred of the world’s leading cancer specialists met in Switzerland recently to formulate a 10-point action plan to finish off what former US president Richard Nixon started in 1971, when he signed the US National Cancer Act. Most Americans thought a cure for cancer would be found within five years then – emulating the technological success of landing a man on the moon. More than 40 years later, few experts talk of a single cure for the 200 or so known types of cancer. The optimism of the early 1970s has given way to the determination of a cancer community under siege from the global epidemic. Now, they have realized that curing cancer is certainly more complicated than landing on the moon. However, many kinds of cancer are treatable and survival rates across the world have improved dramatically. Cancer is still a leading cause of disease worldwide, accounting for around 13 percent of all deaths in 2008.