Despite the overall poor prognosis of gallbladder carcinoma, it appears that, in resectable lesions, an aggressive surgical approach promises improvement in survival rates. Radical treatment of gallbladder carcinoma is based on a detailed knowledge of the lymphatic, venous, direct, and intraductal modes of spread of gallbladder carcinoma. Customized therapy of gallbladder carcinoma takes staging into consideration: if one is dealing with gallbladder carcinoma with macroscopic liver infiltration (T3 or T4), or with a pre- or intraoperatively diagnosed gallbladder carcinoma with an unknown depth of infiltration, an en bloc resection of the gallbladder with adjacent liver segments IVb and V, perhaps including IV, as well as a dissection of the hepatoduodenal ligament should be performed. If the carcinoma is missed intraoperatively at the time of cholecystectomy for other indications, in the presence of a T2 gallbladder carcinoma in proximity to the liver bed, reoperation with dissection of the hepatoduodenal ligament and resection of liver segments IVb and V should be performed. In the presence of T1 gallbladder carcinoma, simple cholecystectomy is adequate. This concept is based on our experience with 113 patients with gallbladder carcinoma who underwent treatment in our department from January, 1970 to June, 1989. Sixty-seven percent of the gallbladder carcinomas were resected, 30% for cure and 37% palliatively. In 33%, the operation was limited to an exploratory laparotomy or a palliative operation, or no operation was performed. Of the curatively resected carcinomas (n = 34), 7 were Stage I, 7 Stage II, 9 Stage III, and 11 Stage IV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)