Patients with local persistence or local regional recurrence of cancer after nephrectomy for renal cell cancer are unlikely to respond well to systemic therapy or external irradiation alone. In this analysis, patients with locally recurrent (9) or persistent (2) cancer following nephrectomy (renal cell cancer in 8, transitional cell or squamous cell cancer in 3) usually received 4,500 to 5,040 cGy. preoperative external beam irradiation followed by maximal surgical debulking and intraoperative electron irradiation (1,000 to 2,500 cGy.). Of 8 renal cell cancer patients 6 were alive and 4 were without disease progression at 15 to 50 months (3 of 4 at 29 months or longer). One patient died free of disease at 10.5 months and 3 had metastases (regional in 1 and distant in 3). Of the 3 transitional or squamous cell carcinoma patients 1 died free of disease 28.5 months after initiation of treatment for recurrence and 2 died of disease progression (liver in 1 and local in 1). It appears that select patients with solitary local recurrence or persistence following radical nephrectomy for renal cell cancer may benefit from an aggressive local treatment approach using irradiation (preoperatively and intraoperatively) plus maximal surgical debulking. In patients with locally advanced high grade transitional cell cancer the locally aggressive approach should probably be combined with multi-drug chemotherapy because of increased systemic risks. For both groups (renal cell carcinoma and transitional/squamous cell carcinoma) the most ideal patient for such treatment is one who has not received prior chemotherapy or external irradiation to the site of relapse, since 3 of 5 patients with disease progression after our aggressive approach had received chemotherapy (2) or external beam irradiation (2) elsewhere before referral.