Hodgkin's disease is one of the most curable cancers thanks to progress in radiotherapy and multi-drug chemotherapy regimens such as mechloretamine-vincristine-procarbazine-prednisone, best known as MOPP. However, long-term side-effects and treatment-induced second malignancies are of great concern. In our institution, 69 patients with nodular sclerosis Hodgkin's disease were treated over 10 years. Twenty-two per cent were stage I, 49% stage II, 23% stage III and 6% stage IV. Actuarial 10-year survival was 83% and actuarial relapse-free survival 61%. Six patients developed a second malignancy with a 10-year actuarial risk of 18%. All six cases occurred in the group treated with MOPP and extensive radiotherapy. Acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia occurred in three patients, preleukemia in two and non Hodgkin's lymphoma in one. In all of these patients, the results were quite poor. Overall survival was equally affected by Hodgkin's disease and by second malignancies. Since new multiple-drug chemotherapy regimens such as adriamycin-bleomycin-vinblastine-dacarbazine, known as ABVD, are equally effective and seem less likely to induce second hematologic malignancies, we suggest that MOPP should no longer be used as a first choice for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease, especially when in combination with radiation therapy.