Background: The oral formulation of ganciclovir is approved at a dose of 3.0 g/day for maintenance treatment of cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis following an initial induction course of intravenous (IV) anti-CMV therapy. Median time to progression of CMV retinitis is 12-20 days shorter with oral compared to IV ganciclovir maintenance, likely due to the limited oral bioavailability of ganciclovir. Objectives: We hypothesized that higher systemic drug exposures associated with increased doses of oral ganciclovir would be associated with increased efficacy. Study design: Maintenance treatment of CMV retinitis with higher than standard doses of oral ganciclovir (>3.0 g/day) was studied in 281 AIDS patients with previously treated, stable retinitis randomized to 3.0, 4.5 or 6.0 g/day oral, or 5 m/kg/day IV ganciclovir. Graders unaware of treatment assignments determined retinitis progression using fundus photographs. Vision, other ophthalmic measures and safety were assessed open-label. Results: Median days to photographic progression were 41, 50, 57 and 70, respectively (P=0.052; 3.0 g vs. IV). Hazard ratios for progression relative to IV were 1.66, 1.28 and 1.19 (P=0.016 for 3.0 g). NONMEM-modeled estimates of average serum ganciclovir concentration area under the curve (AUC 0 - 2 4 ) correlated best with time to progression (P=0.0019). Six grams per day oral ganciclovir was most similar in efficacy to IV, although broad confidence intervals prevented a conclusive comparison. Patients receiving oral ganciclovir had a lower frequency of sepsis and IV catheter events. Conclusions: This study suggests that the efficacy of ganciclovir for the maintenance treatment of CMV retinitis improves with increasing total drug exposure (measured as average serum concentration AUC 0 - 2 4 ). All four regimens of ganciclovir were reasonably well tolerated, with safety profiles similar to what has been reported in prior work.