2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (2-CDA) is very effective in the treatment of patients with hairy-cell leukaemia, with an overall response rate of 80-95%. The standard treatment is a continuous intravenous infusion for 7 days. The bioavailability of 2-CDA after subcutaneous injection is 100%, but the concentration-time profile is completely different compared to continuous intravenous administration. In the present study we compared the intravenous standard treatment (group 1, n = 22; 0.1 mg/kg/d for 7 days, civ.) with subcutaneous administration of 2-CDA (group 2, n = 62; 0.14 mg/kg/d for 5 days, s.c.) in patients with hairy-cell leukaemia. In group 1, 96% (21/22) of patients responded to 2-CDA (complete remission 73%, partial remission 23%) and in the second group 97% were responsive (complete response 76%, 47/62; partial remission 21%, 13/62). The percentage for moderate and severe infections in the trial with intravenous and subcutaneous treatment was 14% and 26% respectively (p = 0.37). We conclude that subcutaneous administration of 2-CDA in patients with hairy-cell leukaemia is feasible and economical and results in comparable responses and toxicity compared to the intravenous standard treatment.