Monitoring of therapy-related late effects after acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) therapy in childhood has become an increasingly important area in posttherapeutic patient surveillance. The usefulness of conventional electro-encephalographic (EEG) investigations as part of these attempts is controversially discussed. However, EEG recordings have become a popular approach for judgement on the functional integrity of the central nervous system in this subject group. The present report focuses on this problem and discusses the question whether and to what extent conventional EEG recordings were correlated with further measures of central nervous system (CNS) integrity and therapeutic differences. EEGs were recorded in 110 subjects, asymptomatic long-term survivors of ALL in childhood, during a large retrospective multicenter study evaluating CNS late sequelae following antileukemic therapy in Germany and Austria. EEG findings were correlated with demographic data, illness- and treatment-related parameters, as well as with data on the morphological, neurological and psychological status of the participating subjects. At the time of follow-up the EEG was abnormal in 47 cases (42.7%). The most frequent EEG abnormalities observed were disturbances of the background activity (n = 45, 95.8%), followed by hypersynchrone activities (n = 1.0, 21.3%) and interhemispheric differences/focal slowing (n = 6, 12.8%). With exception of age at diagnosis, none of the observed EEG abnormalities showed a correlation with any of the aforementioned illness- or treatment-related parameters. Eighty percent of the observed EEG abnormalities were found in children younger than 5 years at diagnosis. Children less than 2 years of age as well as those above 5 years at onset of disease showed a significantly reduced prevalence of EEG disturbances compared to subjects between 2 and 5 years at diagnosis. Neither the degree of illness nor therapy-specific differences showed any relationship to EEG outcome. There was no specific EEG finding for a specific morphological substrate, neurological or psychological deficiency and vice versa. Overall, there was no beneficial effect of routine EEG testing in children following therapy for ALL. According to our data, the evaluation of conventional EEG recordings of otherwise asymptomatic ALL long-term survivors is not a very helpful measure for predicting the degree of behavioral deficiencies, neurological disturbances, or morphological CNS abnormalities, which may be present or will develop in this special subject group.