From 1967 through December 1987, 145 patients with endometrioid carcinoma of the ovary were treated at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. Thirty-eight patients (26.2%) had stage I disease, 28 (19.3%) stage II, 60 (41.4%) stage III, and 11 (7.6%) stage IV; 8 patients (5.5%) were unstaged. Grade 2 or 3 histology was seen in 119 patients (82.1%). In addition to surgical therapy, 128 patients underwent chemotherapy, including single-agent therapy, noncisplatin combination therapy, and cisplatin-based therapy. No statistically significant improvement in median survival was noted among these three chemotherapy groups for stages II, III, and IV (P = 0.22). A significant improvement in median survival was noted for those patients who achieved a complete clinical response, regardless of type of chemotherapy (96 or more months for single-agent therapy, P = 0.001; 31.5 months for noncisplatin combination therapy, P = 0.016; and 85 months for cisplatin-based therapy, P = 0.0001). Synchronous ovarian and uterine malignancies were seen in 18 patients (12.4%). No difference in survival was seen for patients with endometriosis (P = 0.13) or endometrial cancer (P = 0.09) when compared with those who did not have these histologic findings.