The expression of the S-phase associated, nuclear protein proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was investigated in routinely paraffin-embedded surgical specimens from 209 breast cancer patients. Cytometric DNA assessments were performed on fine-needle aspirates, upon which the primary diagnosis of breast cancer had been based. The mean clinical follow-up was 16 years (range 13-20 years). The percentage of PCNA immunoreactive tumour cells ranged between less than 5 to 60% (mean value 13.34%). There was a direct association between PCNA expression, high histological tumour grade (p < 0.01), and DNA aneuploidy (p = 0.009). In a subgroup of 22 patients with near-diploid DNA distribution patterns the PCNA expression yielded additional prognostic information. Patients with tumours of near-diploid DNA histograms and more than 20% of PCNA immunoreactive neoplastic cells had a significantly worse clinical course, than patients with near-diploid tumours containing less than 20% PCNA immunoreactive cells (p = 0.0001). In contrast, the PCNA immunoreactivity did not yield additional prognostic information for patients with distinctly diploid or highly aneuploid tumour variants. In a multivariate analysis comprising all 209 patients, nodal status (p < 0.01), tumour size (p < 0.01), and DNA ploidy (p < 0.01) were found to have significant prognostic effect. The findings indicate that carcinomas characterised by high proliferative activity and near-diploid DNA distribution patterns can show rapid tumour progression. The combined assessment of the PCNA immunoreactivity and of the nuclear DNA content in routinely processed surgical specimens of breast cancer patients appears to be of prognostic value.