Cystinuria is a rare cause of renal calculi, whose management presents a complex problem mainly due to the hardness and high recurrence rate of cystine stones. During the period 1987–1991, 28 established cases of cystine calculi were treated by extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) and percutaneous nephrolithotripsy (PCNL). These cases were divided into 5 groups, according to the position and size of the stones, and each group then followed a specific regimen, either ESWL monotherapy or a combined treatment comprising an initial ESWL treatment followed by PCNL or vice versa. ESWL monotherapy provided satisfactory results only in the group with pelvic stones (54.5% success rate), with 2.16 stone treatments/renal unit, and only with calculi smaller than 2.5 cm. The groups with multiple stones or staghorn calculi were treated with a combined treatment of ESWL and PCNL and had success rates of 50 and 67%, respectively. However, the group in which PCNL was followed by ESWL showed a clear advantage over the group in which ESWL was administered before PCNL, since it required a smaller number of ESWL treatments (1,5 stone treatments/renal unit as compared to 4.3 stone treatments/renal unit). Finally, attempts for ESWL in situ in the few cases of ureteral stones proved unsuccessful.