From May, 1979 to March, 1981, 76 leukemia patients were prepared for bone marrow transplantation (BMT) with a new hyperfractionated total body irradiation (TBI) regimen (1320 cGy in 11 fractions, 3x/day), followed by cyclophosphamide, 60 mg/kg, for two days. Partial lung shielding was done on each treatment, with supplemental electron beam treatments of the chest wall to compensate, and of the testes, a sanctuary site. This regimen was initiated to potentially reduce fatal interstitial pneumonitis as well as decrease leukemic relapse. These patients were analyzed in May, 1982, for a minimum follow-up of 14 months. Overall actuarial survival at 1 year for acute non-lymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) patients is 63%, while relapse-free survival at 1 year is 53%. For those ANLL patients who underwent BMT while in remission (first, second, and third combined), relapse-free survival is 61% at 1 year compared with 40% for those patients who had their BMT at the time of relapse (greater than or equal to 10% blasts in marrow). On the other hand, for acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) patients, there is no significant difference between relapse or remission patients with regard to overall survival or relapse-free survival, when relapse is defined as greater than 5% blasts in the marrow at the time of cytoreduction. Overall actuarial survival at 1 year for ALL is 61% and relapse-free survival is 45% at 1 year. Patients with ALL who had their BMT cytoreduction at the time of relapse have a survival equal to that of our remission patients, and greater than that of patients in relapse cytoreduced with a single dose as reported by others. However, patients with greater than or equal to 10% blasts have not fared as well, having only a 22% 1 year relapse-free survival compared with a 68% 1 year relapse-free survival for patients with less than 10% blasts. Fatal interstitial pneumonitis has dropped to 18% compared with 50% in our previous single-dose TBI regimen (1000 cGy), in which the same doses of cyclophosphamide were given prior to TBI. In conclusion, not only has fatal interstitial pneumonitis been reduced by hyperfractionation and partial lung blocking, but there may be a survival advantage in ALL patients in relapse, who have a survival equal to that of remission patients. This may indicate a greater cell kill with the higher dose (1320 cGy) attained with this regimen, in these patients with a higher leukemic cell burden.