New developments in the management of gallstone disease, and particularly percutaneous and extracorporeal treatments that leave the mucosa intact, have renewed interest in the relationship between cholelithiasis and carcinoma. These treatments are both available in our hospital and to examine this question we studied the patients presenting between 1980 and 1990 with gallbladder cancer. The study comprised 21 patients with histologically proven carcinoma. The M:F ratio was 1:4 with a mean age of 76 years. Gallstones were present in 18 patients (85.7%). Ten patients remain alive today and in the 11 who died the median survival was 4 months. A preoperative diagnosis was made by ultrasound in only two patients. The lack of a preoperative diagnosis in the majority of patients is clearly a cause for concern and while our figures, like other series, do not establish a causal relationship with gallbladder carcinoma, it is vital to be diligent in the follow-up of high-risk patients (stones greater than 3 cm) with intact gallbladder mucosa after the treatment of stone disease.