CORT has been developed to treat recurrent gynaecological malignancies infiltrating the pelvic wall unilaterally. The surgical part consists of: (i) staging laparotomy/lymphadenectomy, (ii) maximum tumour resection at the pelvic wall and exenteration of infiltrated central pelvic organs, (iii) implantation of guiding tubes on the residual tumour/tumour bed on the pelvic wall, (iv) pelvic wall plasty with muscle, musculocutaneous and omentum flaps, (v) operative reconstruction of bowel, bladder and perineo-vulvo-vaginal functions. Radiation is performed as interstitial high dose rate brachytherapy through the implanted tubes. Patients without prior pelvic irradiation receive in addition, whole pelvis teletherapy. CORT has been evaluated in a prospective phase I and II trial at the University of Mainz. Within a 3-year period, 21 patients with pelvic wall recurrences from various gynaecological primary tumours were treated. Seventeen patients had been irradiated as (part of) the previous therapy with a median total mid-pelvic dose of 65 Gy (range 40-100 Gy). There was no operative mortality. Five patients developed complications necessitating surgical intervention. One patient died from fatal thromboembolism 6 months after CORT without evidence of tumour progression. In 14 patients, local tumour control has been achieved. After a median follow-up period of 27 months (range 6-38 months) Kaplan-Meier life table analysis revealed an actuarial survival probability of 55% (recurrence-free 49%). We conclude from these preliminary results, that the CORT procedure for the treatment of pelvic wall recurrences is feasible and may lead to encouraging therapeutic success in selected patients, whose situation had been hopeless so far.