During the period from January 1973 to December 1970, 774 renal transplantations in 698 children have been performed in our Renal Unit. A total of 540 grafts have been examined both by light and immunofluorescence microscopy at least once. Recurrent glomerulonephritis was diagnosed in 62 grafts, de novo glomerulonephritis in 68 and allograft glomerulopathy (AGP) in 38. AGP was defined as a lesion affecting all glomeruli and characterized by widespread reduplication of the GBM with widening of the subendothelial space and interposition of mesangial matrix and without significant deposits by immunofluorescence. The aim of the current study is to describe the natural history of AGP and to delinate its clinical significance. At time of biopsy, an increase in serum creatinine was present in 30 patients associated with a proteinuria > or = 1 g/day in 21. During the post-transplantation course, proteinuria was present in 29 patients and associated with a nephrotic syndrome in 10 of them. With a mean follow-up of eight years seven months, two patients died, 23 lost their grafts and 13 have a functioning graft. The lesions of AGP recurred in three of the nine children who received a second graft. Thirteen of the 33 patients in whom earlier biopsies were performed showed a different pattern of involvement characterized by a prominent swelling of active endothelial and mesangial cells and a hypercellularity related to the presence of mononuclear cells both in the lumens and in the mesangial areas.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)