35 years have passed since Higby and colleagues demonstrated the clinical activity of cisplatin in a broad spectrum of tumours. Although platinum derivatives are now familiar in medical oncology, this group’s land mark study, published in 1974, had a major eff ect on chemotherapy combinations over subsequent years. In 1965, Rosenberg and co-workers found that the discharge of an electric current from a platinum electrode inhibited the replication of Escherichia coli, before going on to isolate several platinum-containing compounds from the culture medium that were found to cause nucleic-acid alkylation. 4 years later, platinum derivatives were recognised as a new class of anti-cancer drugs with promising pre-clinical activity. Higby and colleagues investigated the activity of cisdiaminodichloroplatinum (DDP, cisplatin) in a phase I study. The trial was divided into two parts, although neither the exact number of patients treated nor the exact inclusion and exclusion criteria are explicitly mentioned in the paper. In the fi rst part of the study, cisplatin was infused intravenously over 3–5 min according to two diff erent schedules (50–100 mg/m2 as a single dose or 18–24 mg/m2 daily for 5 days). Irreversible renal toxicity occurred in fi ve of nine patients receiving cisplatin as a single dose and in two of fi ve patients treated with a daily dose for 5 days. Severe nausea and emesis occurred in almost all patients, and high-frequency hearing loss was noted in fi ve patients. Haematological toxicity was mild. Two patients with persistent increases in serum creatinine died; both patients had received gentamicin despite renal dysfunction. Pathological examination of kidney biopsy samples from both patients showed acute tubular necrosis lesions. In the second part of the study, patients received cisplatin 20 mg/m2 daily for 5 days. Of 11 patients with testicular tumours refractory to conventional therapy (doxorubicin and dactinomycin at this time), two complete and four partial responses were observed. Long-lasting responses were also seen in patients with anaplastic small-cell carcinoma of the thyroid and transitional-cell carcinoma of the bladder (one each). Hence, Higby and colleagues reported high response rates (close to 50%) in patients with testicular cancer, irrespective of histological subtype. By contrast, response rates in phase I oncology trials done between 1991 and 2002 were close to 10%, although death rates in modern phase I trials average 0·5%, probably lower than that reported by Higby and colleagues. In addition to effi cacy data, this study provided important information on cisplatin’s toxicity: a high emeto genic potential, acute and cumulative nephrotoxicity, and a risk of high-frequency hearing impairment. Peripheral neuropathy, another important toxicity of cisplatin, was later reported in patients receiving higher cumulative doses of the drug. Renal toxicity was subsequently shown to be reduced by osmotic diuresis and forced hydration. On the basis of this study, cisplatin became part of chemotherapy regimens that still constitute the gold standard for treatment of sarcomas and cancers of the testes, ovaries, bladder, head and neck, and lungs. During the 1980s and 1990s, other platinum derivatives devoid of renal toxicity—carboplatin and oxaliplatin—were developed, broadening the spectrum of activity of platinum derivatives, and establishing these drugs as a cornerstone of modern chemotherapy.