Traditionally, creatinine clearance is used as an estimation of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) because of its relative ease and low cost. Errors in collection limit its usefulness. Estimation of GFR using 99mTc diethylene-triamine pentaacetic acid (Tc-DTPA) by direct scintigraphic determination of fractional radionuclide accumulation within each kidney does not require blood or urine sampling, takes 10 to 15 minutes to perform, and has been reported to give a GFR that correlates with 24-hour urinary creatinine clearance (CC) in hospitalized patients (r = 0.95). To assess its usefulness in the outpatient diabetic with nephropathy, 24 patients with type I diabetes underwent 56 iothalamate clearances during water diuresis and 56 simultaneous Tc-DTPA GFR estimations. GFR was also estimated from 24-hour urinary CC, 100/creatinine, and by the formula of Cockcroft and Gault. Tc-DTPA GFR estimation by direct renal scanning correlated relatively poorly with iothalamate GFR (r = 0.74) in this patient population when all levels of iothalamate GFR were compared (n = 56), but improved (r = 0.80) when iothalamate GFR values greater than or equal to 120 mL/min were excluded from analysis (n = 45). Given all levels of iothalamate GFR, the best correlation was obtained with the estimation using the equation of Cockcroft and Gault (r = 0.86).