Although hepatectomy for liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma is an effective treatment, recurrence in the liver is still the most common site after hepatectomy. Thirty patients underwent hepatectomy for hepatic metastases and 17 of them had recurrence in the remnant liver during the following 12-year period. Six of the 17 patients underwent a removal of isolated hepatic recurrences. Two of the six patients underwent a third hepatectomy, and three patients underwent partial lung resection on a total of five occasions. There were no operative deaths while complications after a third hepatectomy contributed to a high morbidity rate of 40 per cent. The mean length of survival of the six patients was 28.5 months from the second hepatectomy. The prognosis of the six patients who underwent a repeat hepatectomy was significantly better than that of patients with unresectable recurrence after an initial hepatectomy (p less than 0.01). The overall 5-year survival of 29 patients excluding one in-hospital death was 44.7 per cent. Our results reveal that aggressive removal of isolated and resectable recurrent disease has the potential to improve the prognosis of selected patients with metastatic cancer.