In a double blind design the tolerability and efficacy of single-dose DEC (6 mg/kg/body weight) or ivermectin (400 mug/kg/body weight) was studied in 30 asymptomatic W. bancrofti parasite carriers each. Although both drugs were tolerated well, the adverse reaction score (DEC 0.5; ivermectin 1.5) and overall incidence (DEC 65.0%; ivermectin 93.3%) were significantly higher in the ivermectin group. Major adverse reactions were fryer, headache and myalgia, all of which peaked on the second day post-therapy. Efficacy was measured in terms of proportion of cases clearing parasitaemia and reduction in mean parasite density compared to pretherapy levels. Although at the end of one year the ivermectin group showed a significantly higher efficacy (34.8%, 97.0%) compared to DEC (8.3%, 83.8%), at the end of the second year there was no significant difference in efficacy between the drugs (73.7%, 99.5% for ivermectin; 47.8%, 98.9% for DEC). The tolerability and efficacy of the two drugs were not significantly different between gender, age and weight classes of patients.