Chemoprevention is the newest strategy for controlling and managing cancer. At present, the multistep character of epithelial carcinogenesis makes this disease process the most amendable to chemopreventive interventions, which occur in the postinitiation, preinvasive phases. Chemoprevention study has focused on oral carcinogenesis because of its excellent preclinical models, well-defined premalignant phase (leukoplakia), ease of monitoring, and link through field carcinogenesis to other epithelial carcinogeneses of the upper and lower aerodigestive tract. Retinoids, the derivatives of vitamin A, are the most-studied chemopreventive agents, and 13-cis-retinoic acid is the best-studied chemopreventive retinoid. Laboratory study of the newly discovered nuclear receptors of retinoic acid is closing in on the precise mechanism of retinoid action. Only 13-cis-retinoic acid, at high doses, has established chemopreventive activity, which is in suppressing oral premalignancy and preventing second primary head-and-neck tumors. Preclinical and clinical work in the other aerodigestive sites of the lung and esophagus are at an early phase of study with no conclusive results currently available. High-dose 13-cis-retinoic acid also has achieved significant activity in preventing invasive carcinomas of the skin. High-dose 13-cis-retinoic acid, however, is not ideal for widespread chemoprevention approaches because of its toxicity. The toxicity-to-risk balance is delicate and complicated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)