Most children with nephrotic syndrome do well, usually with multiple relapses and remissions. Some children require high doses of oral steroids to sustain a remission and develop significant steroid toxicity. These patients frequently can be managed with oral alkylating agents or with cyclosporine. A few nephrotic children to not respond to oral prednisone. The most common biopsy finding in steroid-resistant patients is focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Many patients with this condition progress to chronic renal failure. Evidence suggests that the outcome is improved with either cyclosporine or with a protocol using pulse intravenous methylprednisolone and oral alkylating agents.