Purpose: We assess the outcome of detrusorectomy in 35 patients with Spina bifida who were incontinent due to poor bladder volume or poor compliance. Materials and Methods: Of 51 patients requiring bladder augmentation 35 underwent detrusorectomy. In 3 patients ileocystoplasty was later performed as a secondary procedure because of failure of the detrusorectomy. Results: A total of 35 patients (17 males, 18 females) underwent detrusorectomy. Mean patient age at operation was 9.9 years (range 0.4 to 17.8). Mean followup was 4.9 years (range 1 to 10.5). A continent catheterizable vesicostomy was constructed in 14 patients and ureteral reimplantation was performed in 8. Twenty-five patients also underwent sling and/or Burch cystourethropexy during detrusorectomy, of whom 19 are continent and 5 have some leakage between clean intermittent catheterizations. In 1 girl the sling procedure was not successful, and she was subsequently treated with bladder neck closure. Bladder compliance after operation was improved in 9 cases and unchanged in 10. Of the 16 patients in whom compliance was already acceptable before the operation and was unchanged after detrusorectomy 7 were able to stop antimuscarinic therapy. Compliance became poor in 4 cases, of which 3 required ileocystoplasty. Bladder volume (as a percentage of normal volume for age) was increased after detrusorectomy in 13 patients, unchanged in 11 and decreased in 11. Complications of detrusorectomy included bladder leakage in 2 cases. One patient needed a laparotomy because of urinary ascites shortly after the operation. Conclusions: Detrusorectomy may be combined with other procedures such as ureteral reimplantation, slingplasty and continent vesicostomy. Of 35 treated patients compliance improved in 16 (46%),volume improved in 13 (37%), 3 had no change in parameters, and 3 had a slight decrease in volume and compliance. Four patients had poor results, of whom 3 needed a secondary ileocystoplasty. Therefore, it may be concluded that detrusorectomy is a safe and probably useful procedure for improvement of bladder volume and compliance in patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction, and may obviate the need for ileocystoplasty in a limited number of patients.