Endoscopic laser therapy with the neodymium-yttrium-aluminium-garnet (Nd-YAG) laser has been shown to provide good palliation of upper gastrointestinal obstruction caused by malignancy, and to be associated with a low morbidity and a low mortality rate. Fifty patients with inoperable upper gastrointestinal malignancy have been treated with this method: 22 had oesophageal carcinoma, 16 adenocarcinoma at the cardio-oesophageal junction, two carcinoma of the antrum and 10 recurrent tumours at the site of previous anastomoses. The main symptoms were dysphagia in 40 and vomiting in seven; three others had recurrent bleeding. An Nd-YAG laser was used to photocoagulate the tumours using power levels of 50-100 W and an average energy output per treatment of 10 000 J. Thirty patients (75%) with dysphagia improved with treatment but vomiting was relieved in only three of the seven patients with this symptom. Complications were infrequent - two patients (4%) developed a perforation and one had a respiratory arrest which was reversible. The 30-day mortality rate was 14% with 2% being related to the prcoedure. Endoscopic Nd-YAG laser therapy is an acceptable alternative to the more established methods of palliation such as surgical or endoscopic intubation.