The object of this study was to assess the 10 year outcome of patients over 70 years of age who underwent amputation for vascular diseases. The secondary objective was to determine the prognostic risk factors. One hundred and four consecutive patients having undergone a leg (16 cases) or through-thigh amputation (88 cases) were reviewed. The average age at the time of surgery was 80.7 years (+/- 6.5 years, range 70-98 years). At the time of the enquiry, there were 4 survivors (operated on average 107.7 months previously +/- 14.6 months). The survival rates at one, six, twelve months and two years were 74.1%, 48.1%, 38.5% and 27% respectively. The mean survival time was 19.2 months with a median of 6 months. Univariate analysis showed the following criteria to be statistically correlated with a poor prognosis: female gender (p = 0.008), previous psychiatric disease (p = 0.007), cachexia (p = 0.004), age of 80 or over (p = 0.025), absence of diabetes (p = 0.025). Multivariate analysis showed that men had a lower risk of death (RR: 0.591--95% CI: 0.394-0.888--p = 0.011). The comparison of subjects who died during the first year with the survivors, showed a deleterious effect of proximal amputations (p = 0.032) and absence of diabetes (p = 0.021). These results confirm the very mediocre prognosis of elderly amputated vascular patients during the first postoperative year. Thereafter, the outlook is not as bad. Female gender would seem to be a poor prognostic factor whereas the presence of diabetes could identify a subgroup with a better outlook.