Disorders in the regulation of apoptotic cell death may contribute to cancer. Furthermore, lymphocytes are supposed to play a role in counteracting tumorigenesis by inducing apoptosis in different human tumors. In this study, for the first time, tumor cell and lymphocyte apoptosis were investigated systematically in human embryonal cell carcinoma. DNA fragmentation and DNA condensation were measured simultaneously on double-fluorescence-labeled testis tumor sections using immunofluorescence microscopy. Different apoptotic indices (AIs), based either on biochemical (DNA fragmentation) or morphological criteria (DNA condensation) alone or on a combination of both, were determined in different histological regions in and around the tumor. Using morphological criteria alone, 40-75% of all apoptotic cells were not detected. Based on previous observations this finding might be related to subsets of apoptotic cells which induce the process of DNA condensation without activation of processes responsible for DNA fragmentation. Moreover, the AIs of tumor cells and lymphocytes were highest in the tumor region, compared with regions around the tumor and distant from it; these findings are discussed in the context of the Fas/FasL system.