Eight patients with acute leukaemia undergoing allogeneic bone-marrow transplantation from ABO-incompatible donors received red-cell-depleted donor marrow without any procedure to diminish their anti-ABO antibody titres. Successful marrow red-cell removal (mean 98.8%) was achieved by means of a large-volume separation technique on Ficoll-Metrizoate in the IBM 2991 blood-cell processor. Clinically significant ABO-haemolytic reaction was prevented in all patients, and there was neither failure of engraftment nor rejection. This approach used alone is satisfactory for most ABO-incompatible marrow-transplant recipients, although combining this with some method of recipient antibody depletion, such as plasma exchange, is recommended in the occasional patient with high anti-ABO titres.