We evaluated the Amplicor PCR assay as an initial diagnostic tool on the basis of clinical diagnosis, and assessed this assay as a follow-up test for patients with pulmonary tuberculosis during chemotherapy. Of the 208 specimens from 155 patients who were bacteriologically and/or clinically diagnosed with active tuberculosis before chemotherapy, 144 were Amplicor PCR-positive (sensitivity, 69.2%), which was equal to the results of culturing. Among 89 specimens which showed positive results by smear and culturing, the Amplicor PCR assay detected 87 (97.8%), whereas among 55 specimens which showed smear-negative but culture-positive results, the Amplicor PCR assay detected 46 (83.6 %)(P= 0.003). No false positive results were found in the two systems (specificity, 100%, 120/120). The Amplicor PCR assay was also evaluated as a follow-up test using 926 specimens from 207 patients receiving active tuberculosis chemotherapy. Among 433 specimens which showed Amplicor-PCR positive, 222 (51.3%) were culture-negative. On the other hand, among 233 culture-positive specimens, only 12 (5.2%) were Amplicor PCR-negative. Therefore, this assay is useful for the rapid diagnosis of tuberculosis. The duration of Amplicor PCR-positive after culture-negative conversion was significantly associated with the presence of cavitary lesion, smear-positive specimens before treatment, and smear-positive specimens with negative cultures during chemotherapy.