Post-transplantation pancreatitis is an infrequent complication with a high risk of mortality. In a 7-year period, there were five patients who had documented pancreatitis out of a total of 488 renal homograft recipients, an incidence of 1 per cent. Two cases occurred in patients with an orthotopic transplant, one of them as a result of surgical injury of the pancreas and the other as a consequence of cytomegalovirus infection. The third case was an acute pancreatitis of hypercalcaemic origin, the fourth patient developed postoperative pancreatitis and acute acalculous cholecystitis, and the fifth had acute pancreatitis and sepsis associated with cytomegalovirus infection. Three patients died as a direct result of the complication. The mean incidence and mean mortality rate of post-transplantation pancreatitis, as determined from our review of the literature of the last 15 years, are 2.3 and 61.3 per cent, respectively; these are similar to the figures found up to 1970 of 1.7 and 52.2 per cent. A multiplicity of factors present in the uraemic patient may be responsible for the continued frequency of post-transplant pancreatitis despite advances in surgical technique and immunosuppressive therapy.