Survivin is a member of a novel protein family of inhibitors of apoptosis, and also plays a role as a potent regulator of mitosis. In semiquantitative Western blot analysis of glioblastomas, survivin expression was shown to be a prognostically significant factor. In the present study we investigated the immunohistochemical expression of survivin and its prognostic impact in a large glioblastoma series comprising 104 consecutive adult patients undergoing a first operation for glioblastoma. We analyzed survivin, Ki-67, and topoisomerase-II-alpha expression in paraffin-embedded tissue, and correlated patient age, Karnofsky performance score, vascular pattern and survivin-, Ki-67-, topoisomerase-II-alpha-, and apoptotic indices with patient outcome using univariate and multivariate survival analysis. Survivin was expressed in all glioblastoma samples, and was prominent in a fraction of nuclei of tumor cells and vascular cells. Further, survivin labeled spindle- and chromosomal material of mitotic figures. Faint cytoplasmic expression was also seen. The survivin index showed significant correlation with Ki-67 and Topo-II-alpha indices. On average, 58.85% of Ki-67 and 91.08% of survivin-expressing nuclei co-expressed Ki-67 and survivin. The survivin index did not correlate significantly with overall survival, whereas patient age, Karnofsky performance score, vascular pattern, and Ki-67 and topoisomerase-II-alpha indices were associated with patient outcome. In summary, in glioblastoma, survivin is expressed predominantly in proliferating tumor cell nuclei. In contrast to Ki-67 and topoisomerase-II-alpha, survivin expression does not influence patient outcome. So, in contrast to Ki-67, survivin does not seem to be useful as prognostic factor in the clinical setting.