Purposes of the study were to evaluate the correlation between intratumoral blood flow and stage, histologic grade, depth of myometrial invasion and lymph node metastasis in endometrial carcinoma and to assess if vascular/lymphatic spaces invasion is predictable by Doppler ultrasound. Fifty-three patients with endometrial carcinoma were enrolled before surgical treatment. Transvaginal Color Doppler Ultrasound was performed to detect the areas of increased vascularity (>/=3) and to record the lowest resistance index (RI) from the blood flow signals within the tumour. Formalin fixed, paraffin embedded pathology slides were reviewed by a senior pathologist to evaluate histologic grading, depth of myometrial invasion, presence of lymph node metastasis and vascular/lymphatic spaces invasion. The number of patients with positive lymph node metastasis was too small to perform any statistical evaluation. Significantly lower RI was noted in tumours of advanced stage (>FIGO Stage I), tumours with higher histologic grade (Grade 3) and with presence of vascular invasion. No correlation was found for myometrial invasion (>50%). A high number of vascular areas was positively correlated with all the prognostic signs. Assessment of tumour changes in vascularity using colour Doppler ultrasound provides useful information for the preoperative prediction regarding stage and histologic grade. The good correlation between Doppler ultrasound results and histological finding of vascular/lymphatic spaces invasion is another point in favour of routine colour Doppler studies in patients with endometrial carcinoma. We believe this technique is useful both for preoperative staging and that recording of tumour recurrence pattern may lead to early selection of those patients that need additional therapy.