Thirty-three women with breast cancer have undergone high dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support at Huddinge Hospital. Twenty-eight patients had stage IV disease while five patients had disease stage II or III with involvement of > 10 axillary lymph nodes. Patients who received peripheral stem cells had a shorter duration of neutropenia than patients who received autologous bone marrow (p < 0.001). The transplant related mortality was 3 per cent. The calculated progression free survival was 39 per cent at 24 months after high dose therapy in women with stage IV chemosensitive breast cancer. Patients who got a complete remission after standard dose chemotherapy had a better survival rate than patients who got a partial remission. All women with refractory disease progressed within five months from therapy. Four out of five patients with disease stage II or III are progression free with the longest follow-up time of 46 months. High dose chemotherapy with stem cell support can be given with acceptable toxicity. The follow-up time is short but the results are promising, in particular for women who obtain a complete remission before the high dose therapy starts.