Twenty-one evaluable patients with primary gastric cancer/local invasion, liver metastasis and peritoneal metastasis were entered in a pilot study of neoadjuvant chemotherapy that used continuous 24-hour infusion 5-FU, 330 mg/m2/day plus low dose CDDP, 6 mg/m2 daily by bolus infusion d1-5. This regimen was repeated for 4 weeks. The overall response rate was 52%, including one complete and ten partial responses. The response rate of differentiated adenocarcinomas was significantly higher than that of poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas. In 15 patients (71%), gastrectomy and lymphadenectomy could be done after this regimen. chemotherapy-induced downstaging from the initial clinical stage was pathologically found in 5 patients who underwent gastrectomy. Toxicity was primarily hematologic. Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia of grade 3 or 4 occurred in 19% and 14% of patients, respectively. The patients were able to take meals during therapy and preserved good quality of life. Median survival time was 11 months for the cancers with liver metastasis and five of the 8 locally advanced cancers are alive 11 months after the therapy. This therapy was effective for patients with high-grade advanced gastric cancer.