To examine the possible in vivo significance of the immunomodulatory effects of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide described in vitro, several parameters of peripheral blood lymphocyte function were studied in a patient with a pancreatic endocrine tumor and high circulating levels of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. There was no imbalance of the circulating lymphocyte subpopulations, and the in vitro responses of the patient's lymphocytes to mitogens were normal. However, there was an increased number (32%) of peripheral lymphocytes expressing interleukin 2 receptor. Serum immunoglobulin M levels were higher than in controls, and the patient's lymphocytes exhibited a spontaneous in vitro immunoglobulin M production higher than normal. Comparable increases in both interleukin 2 receptor expression and immunoglobulin M production were induced in vitro in normal peripheral lymphocyte cultures by the addition of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide concentrations similar to that detected in the patient's plasma. These findings indicate that a modulatory effect of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide on lymphocyte activation and immunoglobulin synthesis may be operating in vivo. They also suggest that vasoactive intestinal polypeptide does not mediate major defects in peripheral blood lymphocyte function in vivo.