Between 1974 and 1990, 58 patients underwent tricuspid valve replacement with a porcine bioprosthesis (Hancock 42, Carpentier-Edwards 16) in the course of polyvalvular replacement (double 21, triple 37). Early postoperative mortality was 12%: 16 patients died secondarily, usually of cardiac causes. The actuarial survival (1 patient lost to follow-up) was 81 +/- 11% at 5 years and 60 +/- 17% at 10 years. Two patients were reoperated for dysfunction of a Hancock bioprosthesis, 11 and 15 years after implantation. At long-term, with an average follow-up of 108 +/- 48 months, 82% of survivors (28/34) were clinically improved. Doppler echocardiography was performed in 29 patients in February 1991. In 21 cases, with a follow-up of 88 +/- 40 months, the bioprosthesis was normal with an average diastolic transprosthetic pressure gradient of 3.8 +/- 1.7 mmHg. In 7 patients followed up for 129 +/- 40 months (p < 0.05) moderate dysfunction of the Hancock prosthesis was observed with a mean diastolic pressure. Severe dysfunction of a Hancock prosthesis was observed in 1 case. Fixed pulmonary hypertension was noted in 11 cases and was associated with a poor clinical result and a raised mean diastolic transprosthetic pressure gradient. The durability and haemodynamic performance of tricuspid porcine bioprostheses are satisfactory in the long term. Prosthetic dysfunction is correlated to the duration of implantation of the bioprosthesis and to persistent pulmonary hypertension.