The main achievement of the project was a two-day consensus conference following extensive consultation with more than 30 experts from a wide range of disciplines, including clinical medicine, surgery, clinical genetics, epidemiology, statistics, pathology, trial methodology, epigenetics, patient advocacy, ethics, and regulatory affairs. The meeting was held in Innsbruck in September 2024. Two manuscripts have been prepared following the conference. The first summarises the consensus of the group – which we named the International Mifepristone Breast Cancer Prevention (IMBCP) Group – and recommendations for further research. This paper articulates the scientific rationale, current state of the field, and a proposed implementation pathway for using mifepristone as a primary breast cancer prevention strategy in women with BRCA1 pathogenic variants. A key component of the approach is the use of epigenetic markers to monitor treatment efficacy - markers that can be assessed in breast biopsies or, more conveniently, in cervical or buccal samples. The second manuscript outlines the urgent need to give antiprogestins such as mifepristone the opportunity to be investigated as a non-surgical option for primary prevention.