Controversy surrounds the benefits of routine surveillance magnetic resonance or computed tomographic imaging for monitoring children after resection of primitive neuroectodermal tumors. A recent study suggested that serial imaging studies detect only a small minority of tumor recurrences in patients with symptoms. The authors concluded that even in patients with recurrence documented by imaging, no patient with a recurrence survived long (average, 5 mo) and that surveillance scanning is of little clinical value in children with primitive neuroectodermal tumors. We reviewed our experience with 25 patients (28% of our total series) who presented to the Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, from 1985 to 1993 with recurrent tumors after surgery and adjuvant therapy. Recurrent tumors were detected on routine imaging in 19 asymptomatic patients (76%) and in 6 symptomatic patients (24%). Recurrences were documented 15 months (mean) after the initial diagnosis in asymptomatic children and 5 months (mean) after the initial diagnosis in children with symptoms of recurrent tumor (P < or = 0.01). Asymptomatic patients with recurrence documented on serial imaging had prolonged survival when compared with those who were symptomatic (P < or = 0.05). The surviving patients with recurrence remained alive for more than 24 months after documentation of recurrence. Early detection of local tumor recurrence by surveillance scanning may provide a critical therapeutic window for successful treatment with aggressive or novel therapies.