Adverse effects of maternal smoking have been mostly identified through epidemiologic investigations that have used questionnaires to assess active and passive smoking. However, unvalidated self-reports of cigarette smoking may bias true estimates of relative risk of smoking-related health outcomes. This report is based on two separate investigations. First, within a molecular epidemiologic study of the relationship between environmental exposures (smoking, air pollution, diet) and developmental impairment, we have compared self-reported tobacco smoke exposure during pregnancy to plasma cotinine measurements in mothers. One hundred and fifty-eight patients from obstetrical wards in Cracow and in Limanowa, Poland were included in the parent study. Biochemically-identified smokers were defined as persons with plasma cotinine levels greater than 25 ng/mL. The data showed that exposure classification based on self-reported smoking status compared with cotinine values was of low sensitivity (52%) but of high specificity (98%). We assessed the effect of this exposure classification error on the association between low birth weight (LBW) and smoking in pregnancy using data from a related epidemiologic study of children's health in Cracow involving 1115 subjects. The odds ratio (OR) estimates for smoking and LBW after adjustment for exposure misclassification error were significantly higher than before adjustment (crude OR = 2.9, corrected OR = 5.1). The estimated attributable fraction (AF(pop)) based on the crude OR amounted to 22%; however, after adjustment it reached 50%. The corresponding values for the attributable fraction in the exposed group (AF(exp)) were 66% and 80%. These results illustrate the value of validating questionnaire responses on smoking during pregnancy against reliable biologic markers.