The purpose of the study was to determine the maximum tolerated dose of continuous infusion of high-dose VP-16 in combination with high-dose melphalan (HDM) for conditioning before autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). Thirteen children (median age 27 months) with stage IV neuroblastoma were treated with high-dose VP-16 and HDM followed by ABMT as consolidation treatment. All had previously received conventional chemotherapy with a mean number of six drugs. Surgery of the primary tumor had been performed in 12/13. We performed a dose-escalating study of VP-16 from 1800 mg/m2/72 h with 300 mg/m2/72 h dose increments according to toxicity. VP-16 was administered as a 72-h i.v. infusion. Melphalan (140 mg/m2/day) was administered once as an i.v. push. VP-16 pharmacokinetics were analyzed in 12 patients. Five children received 1800 mg/m2/72 h of VP-16, five received 2100 mg/m2/72 h and three, 2400 mg/m2/72 h. The mean duration of granulocytopenia (< 0.5 x 10(9)/1) was 24 days and thrombocytopenia (< 50 x 10(9)/1) was 36 days. No major infectious complications occurred. Gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity was the dose-limiting toxicity. Five severe manifestations of GI toxicity in three patients led us to consider 2400 mg/m2/72 h as the MTD. The mean VP-16 clearance rate was 17.3 ml/min/m2 with continuous infusion. A mean steady-state plasma concentration of 24.2 micrograms/ml (s.d. = 2) and 28.3 micrograms/ml (s.d. = 1.9) was achieved at the 1800 mg/ml and 2100 mg/m2 dose levels, respectively, GI toxicity is dose limiting when VP-16 at 2400 mg/m2/72 h, is associated with HDM. When given as a continuous i.v. infusion, at 2100 mg/m2/72 h, VP-16 associated with HDM is well tolerated before ABMT in young heavily pre-treated children.