Oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) interacts with macrophages to induce intracellular cholesterol ester accumulation and foam cell formation. Probucol is a lipid-lowering drug with a well-known antioxidant action. The thiobarbituric acid (TBA)-reacting substances were measured as an index of plasma and LDL lipid peroxidation in a group of hypercholesterolemic patients compared with a normolipidemic control group. The effect of probucol treatment on plasma and LDL lipid peroxidation in the hypercholesterolemic group was also evaluated. Twenty-five patients (10 men and 15 women) with total cholesterol levels greater than 6.5 mmol/liter were given probucol for 24 weeks. Lipid and apoprotein measurements were obtained at 0, 12 and 24 weeks. TBA-reacting substances were also measured in plasma and the LDL fraction. Twenty-five normolipidemic subjects matched for sex, age and body mass index underwent complete blood analysis for purposes of comparison at week 0. Plasma, LDL and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and plasma apoproteins A-I and B significantly decreased after 12 and 24 weeks of probucol treatment. Hypercholesterolemic subjects (men and women) had significantly higher TBA-reacting substances in plasma and LDL than control subjects had (p less than 0.05). The amount of TBA-reacting substances in plasma and LDL showed a very significant decrease after probucol treatment (40 and 44%, respectively, after 24 weeks; p less than 0.05). This reduction was not related to age, sex or body mass index, and was greater than the decrease in lipids. These results support a potential role for probucol as a coadjuvant drug in any lipid-lowering antiatherogenic therapy.