Over the last 20 years of experience with the AIDS epidemic, we have accumulated a great body of knowledge on Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), a major cause of morbidity and mortality in AIDS patients, especially among homosexual and bisexual men. New antiretroviral therapies, in particular the protease inhibitors, appear to be changing the clinical course of KS. Now, it is not unusual to observe a complete resolution and control of KS with the use of these new agents. As we have begun to unravel the pathogenesis of KS, new treatment modalities have merged targeting some of its pathogenic pathways. Although, chemotherapy remains the cornerstone of its treatment, in particular with the new liposomal preparations, new agents may soon change our approach to KS. Experimental therapies being evaluated in ongoing clinical trials include angiogenesis inhibitors, hormonal therapies, retinoic acid derivatives, and immune modulators such as interleukin 12. Better treatment for HIV, and new experimental therapies targeting the pathogenic mechanisms of KS allow us to envision the future treatment of KS with a certain degree of optimism.