The present review focuses on the methodology and clinical significance of new diagnostic approaches to identify individual cancer cells present in bone marrow, both as a frequent site of metastasis formation and an indicator organ for hematogenous tumor cell dissemination. The steadily increasing number of studies on this issue is characterized by considerable methodological variations of important variables, such as the size of the study population, and the reliability of monoclonal antibodies used for tumor cell detection. Emerging data indicate that this disturbing heterogeneity might be overcome by the use of reliable and specific anti-cytokeratin antibodies (for example, A45-B/B3) as, for the time, standard markers for the detection of micrometastatic tumor cells in bone marrow. Prospective clinical studies have shown that immunoassays based on anti-CK antibodies identify patients' subgroups with a poor clinical prognosis with regard to early metastasis manifestation and reduced overall survival in various epithelial tumor entities, including breast, colon, rectum, stomach, esophagus, prostate, renal, bladder, and non-small cell lung cancer. The immunocytochemical assays may be therefore used to improve tumor staging with potential consequences for adjuvant therapy, because disseminated cells appeared to be dormant, non-cycling (for example Ki-67 antigen-negative) cells, suggesting a resistance to cell-cycle dependent therapy, such as chemotherapy. Therefore, cell-cycle independent antibody-based immunotherapy might be an interesting option to complement chemotherapy. Another promising clinical application is monitoring the response of micrometastatic cells to adjuvant therapies, which, at present, can only be assessed retrospectively after an extended period of clinical follow-up. The outlined current strategies for detection and characterization of cancer micrometastasis might help to design and control new therapeutic strategies for secondary prevention of metastatic relapse in patients with operable primary carcinomas.