Radiation tolerance of the partially irradiated liver was studied in eight patients with primary hepatoma treated by a multimodal approach. Seven patients were treated by transarterial embolization therapy (TAE) with Lipiodol-MMC, and two patients were treated by operation, combined with radiotherapy. Six patients had liver cirrhosis and the other one had renal dysfunction. Respiration-gated irradiation was employed to reduce a treatment volume for seven patients. Radiation portals were carefully tailored using the embolized Lipiodol or a metal clip inserted into the tumor as references. Two or three portals were used for each patient. The treatment volume ranged from 64 to 1400 cm3. The target dose ranged from 50.4 Gy to 81.0 Gy, from 73.5 to 108.6 in TDF. Liver function tests (GOT, GPT, LDH, ALP, ChE and total Bilirubin) were examined for 30 weeks after initiation of irradiation. Three patients showed abnormal value in more than 5 tests. Of these three patients, the hepatic hilum was included in the treatment volume in two, and the tumor progressed during the observation period in two. Leukopenia and thrombopenia were observed, but these values were not below 2000 and 40000/mm3, respectively, although the thrombocyte count before irradiation was below 100000/mm3 in 7 patients. AFP titers decreased after the treatment in six out of seven patients with abnormally elevated pretreatment titer. The survival period after staring irradiation was 6.5 to 25 months. "The volume dose" did not correlate well with the degree of the liver function aggravation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)