BACKGROUND: The medical literature shows several examples of an inverse relationship between serum albumin levels and survival in patients with advanced cancer. METHODS: We investigated the effect of baseline serum levels on 180 consecutively treated patients who were diagnosed with breast cancer from March 1993 to December 1999 at our institution. We investigated the effect of low levels of serum albumin (3.5 g/dL) reduced the risk of death by 72% (p = .0033). Only tumor stage had a larger impact on survival (p < .0000). Other factors achieving statistical significance were overexpression of the HER2/Neu antigen (p = .0167) and breast antigen (p = .0116). CONCLUSION: Univariate statistical analysis found that low levels of serum albumin adversely affected survival by a statistically significant level for all stages of breast cancer. We found that a baseline serum albumin level was a powerful prognostic variable, which accounted for 7.35% of the variation in patient survival time.