High-dose chemotherapy with peripheral stem cell or bone marrow transplantation has quickly become accepted as the standard of care for patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) who are chemotherapy induction failures or who relapsed after a short initial remission. The majority of studies would indicate that high-dose therapy is most effective when used early. As a result of promising pilot studies, high-dose therapy is also being used more frequently in patients at initial relapse after a long remission. Future approaches to improve the efficacy of high-dose therapy in marrow transplantation will require more effective chemotherapeutic agents. Recent studies with the taxanes and camptothecins suggest that these agents may be useful (Devizzi et al, 1994). Biological approaches with CD30 based antibodies and immunotoxins may also be helpful adjuncts to conventional-dose debulking regimens. Radio-immunoconjugates may augment the delivery of myelo-ablative doses of radiation therapy selectively to tumours. When patients relapse after high-dose therapy, there has been no standard approach to management. However, single agent chemotherapy (e.g. weekly low-dose vinblastine) has the potential for significant palliation, occasionally for prolonged periods.