Twenty-one cases of large, B-cell lymphoma with an unusually high content of reactive T lymphocytes are described in this report. Fifteen patients presented with lymphoma in nodal sites and six patients presented with lymphoma in extranodal sites. With two exceptions, all patients were more than 50 years of age. The male to female ratio was 1:2. Histologically, isolated to small groups of large lymphoid cells were intermingled with many small lymphocytes. The large cells were neoplastic and exhibited B-lineage markers; immunoglobulin light chain restriction could be demonstrated in two thirds of the cases. There was a rich infiltrate of immunophenotypically mature T lymphocytes that comprised more than 50% of the cellular population. The T lymphocytes ranged from small cells with dark, round nuclei to slightly larger cells with elongated, irregular nuclei. There were occasional medium-sized blastic cells. There was also a variable infiltrate of histiocytes with or without epithelioid features, eosinophils and plasma cells, and increased vascularity. The peculiar morphologic features were also reproduced in other sites in the four patients for whom additional histologic materials were available for examination. We postulate that the abundance of T cells results either from a florid host reaction or from cytokine secretion by the neoplastic B cells, attracting T cells to the vicinity. The morphologic and immunologic features mimic those of a variety of benign lymphoproliferative diseases, angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy and lymphomas arising in angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy, peripheral T-cell lymphoma, secondary B-immunoblastic lymphoma, and Hodgkin's disease. Careful morphologic evaluation and immunophenotypic studies using leukocyte antibodies reactive in paraffin-embedded sections are of great assistance in determining a diagnosis.