Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha were measured in 50 adult patients following orthotopic liver transplantation. The mean (+/- SEM) plasma concentration of TNF-alpha was significantly higher in patients experiencing a rejection episode (941 +/- 83 pg/ml) than in those with a stable clinical course (240 +/- 6 pg/ml; P = 0.0001). Peak levels of TNF-alpha were usually found at the time of clinically diagnosed rejection, although elevated levels were observed 1-2 days earlier. First-week peak TNF-alpha levels were significantly higher in patients who suffered graft loss (2146 +/- 788 pg/ml) than in those who were discharged from the hospital without clinical evidence of rejection (581 +/- 93 pg/ml; P = 0.004). TNF-alpha levels were not correlated with white blood cell count (r2 = 0.004), cyclosporine levels (0.01), serum creatinine (0.002), serum bilirubin (0.05), serum SGOT (0.03), or SGPT (0.05). TNF-alpha levels were not elevated in four cases of viral hepatitis occurring after transplantation. We conclude that circulating levels of TNF-alpha are elevated during liver allograft rejection and may precede clinical manifestations. First-week TNF-alpha levels are also useful predictors of long-term graft outcome. Further investigation is required to determine whether this monokine is important in the actual pathogenesis of allograft rejection.