Adult medulloblastoma is a rare tumor with few retrospective studies published so far. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy or chemotherapy at relapse is unclear. This study reports therapy and outcome in all adult (>or=16 years old) medulloblastoma (n=34) and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) patients (n=2) treated in 2 neuro-oncological centers between 1976 and 2002. The median age was 24.5 years (range 16-76). After resection, 16 patients were treated with craniospinal radiotherapy alone, 20 patients also received adjuvant chemotherapy (8 vincristine, CCNU, cisplatin; 7 methotrexate alone or methotrexate/vincristine-based polychemotherapy; 5 other protocols). Median survival in the whole cohort was 126 months (2+ - 200+months). Five-year and 10-year survival rates were 79 % and 56%. Adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with a non-significant trend to prolonged survival (relative risk (RR) 1.89; p=0.068). The median progression-free survival (PFS) after primary therapy was 83 months. At relapse, 10 of 12 evaluable patients achieved a complete response upon second-line therapy. The median survival times from first (n=17) and second relapse (n=9) were 21 months (0-67+ months; 5/17 without second relapse) and 20 months (1-29 months). Cox regression analysis revealed the infiltration of the floor of the 4(th) ventricle at diagnosis as the only therapy-independent prognostic factor (RR 0.48; p=0.03). In conclusion, adjuvant chemotherapy may prolong survival in adult medulloblastoma patients. Moreover, second-line therapy may be beneficial for these patients. As in pediatric medulloblastoma patients, primary infiltration of the floor of the 4(th) ventricle indicates a poor prognosis.