Hope for cure in children with advanced cancer came with introduction of chemo- and radiotherapy, however surgery is still important as a part of the multidirectional treatment. The aim of the review was to assess the impact of surgical treatment in children with advanced cancer. From 1991 to 1997, 30 patients aged from 6 months to 17 years were treated for soft tissue sarcomas (STS: stage III/8 pts, stage IV/2 pts), nephroblastoma (WT: stage IV/5 pts, stage V/3 pts), PNET/Ewing sarcoma (locally advanced/4 pts, metastatic/2 pts) and others (stage III/4 pts, stage IV/2 pts). All patients received pre- and postoperative chemotherapy, all but 6 were irradiated. Twenty one of 30 patients entered remission (CR) after radical surgery for local control: 12 relapsed locally, of whom 7 entered IICR after re-treatment and next surgery and 5 died. 3 of 9 patients who never had any local relapse, died of metastases. Nine of 30 patients never had any radical surgery, 8 died (including 2 toxic deaths) and 1 (stage V Wilms tumour) is in CR after chemotherapy and radiotherapy (12 Gy including both kidney with unresectable tumours). Advanced cancer does not imply the fatal outcome: 14/30 patients are in CR. Possibility of surgical resection of the disease focuses brings some hope for final cure even in initially disseminated disease: 13 such cases of 21 are in ICR or IICR (follow-up: 6 months-7 years) whereas only 1 of 9 those who have never had any radical surgery.