In a previous study, we used an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to measure soluble human interleukin-2 receptors (IL-2R), and found that when activated lymphocytes produce cell-associated IL-2R, they also release a soluble form of IL-2R into culture supernatants in vitro. Soluble IL-2R have also been detected circulating in vivo at low levels in the serum of healthy individuals, and at abnormal levels in a variety of diseases, particularly those where immune dysfunction is thought to play an important role. We therefore evaluated serum IL-2R levels in 77 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and compared them with levels in 46 age-matched healthy controls. Nineteen additional RA patients with concurrently obtained sera and synovial fluid (SF) samples were compared with 14 patients with osteoarthritis of the knee or hip. The serum IL-2R levels were significantly elevated in RA patients, compared with the control groups (P less than 0.0001). Serum IL-2R levels in the RA patients did not correlate with disease activity as determined by a variety of clinical and laboratory parameters. RA SF IL-2R levels were significantly higher than corresponding RA serum IL-2R levels (P = 0.0001). No such difference was noted in the osteoarthritis group, where serum and SF IL-2R levels were comparable with serum levels in healthy controls. These findings support the hypothesis that in vivo lymphocyte activation plays an important role in RA; moreover, soluble IL-2R measurement in serum and SF may be a very useful way to identify patients at risk for, or manifesting, a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory arthropathy.