Reactive systemic AA amyloidosis was induced in female, male and castrated male hamsters either by repeated injection of casein or by injection of amyloid enhancing factor (AEF) followed by casein. The circulating concentrations of serum amyloid A protein (SAA), the putative precursor of the AA amyloid fibril protein, and of female protein (FP), the pentraxin homologue of serum amyloid P component (SAP) of other species, were measured and correlated with the speed and extent of amyloid deposition. The SAA responses of the three groups of hamsters were indistinguishable in both experiments but, in confirmation of previous reports, castrated males had FP levels higher than those of control males though still lower than in females. No differences were seen between groups in amyloid induction by casein injection alone. However, in the accelerated model using AEF, amyloid deposition occurred sooner and was more extensive in both females and castrated males than in unoperated males. These results strengthen the association between SAP, of which FP is the hamster counterpart, and the pathogenesis of amyloidosis.