In a multicentre study on the treatment of Hodgkin's disease, 88 out of 297 patients with primary advanced stages IIIB/IV failed to respond to alternating COPP/ABVD chemotherapy +/- radiotherapy. They may be broken down as follows: tumour progression under current therapy (PD) 23/28, partial remission at the end of treatment (PR) 28/88, early nodal recurrence 13/88, late nodal recurrence 15/88, extranodal recurrence 7/88, unclear localisation 1/88. Thirty-six months after noting failure of treatment, 45% of all patients were still alive. The prognosis was poorest in the case of primary PD. Only 1/23 of these patients experience lasting complete remission thanks to salvage treatment (cCR). Eleven patients with an exclusively nodal recurrence experienced a cCR on treatment with radiation alone, and may be considered a low-risk recurrence group. For a high-risk recurrence group (n = 57), indication for high-dose chemotherapy with subsequent autologous bone marrow transplantation (HDC/ABMT) should have been recognized on the basis of the present definition. The survival probability of these patients, who only received conventional salvage treatment, was 38% after 30 months (95% confidence limit, 22 to 54%). These data would not appear to be appreciably poorer than those reported in the literature for comparable patients receiving HDC/ABMT. Only a randomized comparison would be capable of showing whether HDC/ABMT is superior to high-dose conventional chemotherapy with haematopoietic growth factors. It is proposed that such a therapeutic trial should be initiated as soon as possible.