38 patients with stage III Hodgkin's disease underwent laparotomy with splenectomy as restaging procedure after first line chemotherapy which included MOPP, ABVD, or both. 28 patients were judged to be in clinical complete remission (CR) and 10 were resistant or had relapsed. Among patients in CR, 27 (96%) were confirmed to be in pathological CR; among patients resistant or relapsed, 9 (90%) were confirmed to have disease in the abdomen or retroperitoneum. The therapy for patients in clinical remission before laparotomy consisted of TNI or sTNI in 19 patients, mediastinal radiation in 6 patients and no further therapy in the remaining 3 patients. No significant differences were seen in survival and relapse-free survival between those patients treated by extensive and those treated by local radiotherapy or no further therapy. Instead, among those patients who received extensive radiotherapy 3 developed acute non-lymphoid leukemia (ANLL). The therapy for this group of patients consisted of further chemotherapy in 7 who had concomitant liver involvement and TNI in the remaining 3 who had the disease confined to the spleen and/or lymph nodes. Among these patients, only 3 obtained CR; 2 with radiation and 1 who was resistant to MOPP, with ABVD. This study leads us to re-consider the role of laparotomy in stage III HD which should be used as non-routine procedure only in selected patients without poor prognostic factors who may be cured by radiotherapy alone. In patients resistant to chemotherapy, an early evaluation of disease in the abdomen may be useful for a better salvage treatment.