A treatment strategy for patients with refractory testicular cancer who failed in the initial therapy has not been established. Patients with metastatic testicular cancer are treated with BEP (BLM, etoposide, CDDP) therapy, which is recognized as the standard first line chemotherapy regimen. About 80% of patients attain complete remission (CR) with BEP therapy and following salvage surgery. The patients who fail to achieve CR or have recurrences during the period of follow-up will be candidates for salvage chemotherapy. Salvage chemotherapies include VIP (ETP, ifosfamide, CDDP) therapy or high dose chemotherapy with peripheral blood stem cell auto-transplantation (PBSCT); however, the effectiveness of these therapies is limited. Those who fail in these salvage therapies are treated with irinotecan hydrochloride (CPT-11) in Japan. Clinical trials with paclitaxel and gemcitabine have recently been started in the United States and Europe. Further investigations are necessary to develop more useful regimens with these novel anticancer agents for refractory testicular cancer.