We treated 14 patients with progressive metastatic colorectal cancer, using a combination of subcutaneous recombinant human interleukin-2 (4.8 x 10(6) IU/m2 three times daily on days 1 and 22, and twice daily on days 2 and 23, followed by 2.4 x 10(6) IU/m2 twice daily on days 3-5, 8-12, 24-26, and on 5 consecutive days per week, starting day 29), recombinant human interferon-alpha 2a (5.0 x 10(6) U/m2 thrice weekly), and 5-fluorouracil (750 mg/m2 i.v. bolus on days 15-19, and at weekly intervals thereafter, with a 1-week off-therapy interval every 4 weeks). Therapy was continued until disease progression occurred. Four (29%) and 8 (57%) evaluable patients achieved partial remission and stable disease, respectively; median response duration was 5.9 months. Toxicity of this regimen was moderate; the most common side effects were thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, nausea/vomiting, anorexia, malaise and fevers in all patients, along with diarrhea (63%) and mucositis (54%). Less than 10% of patients developed WHO grade IV toxicity; no toxic deaths occurred. Efficacy of this combination was not substantially different from alternative 5-fluorouracil-based regimens.