The liver is the primary site for colorectal metastases and hepatic resection often fails to cure these patients. Little is known about T-cell immune response in these patients or its changes after interleukin-2 (IL-2) infusion. Using polymerase chain reaction methodology, we investigated T-cell receptor (TCR) V alpha and V beta gene segment subfamily usage in tumor, hepatic tissue, and blood of six patients undergoing hepatic resection and, in addition, in six patients receiving preoperative adjuvant IL-2 therapy (randomized phase I trial). The objectives were (a) to analyze the TCR repertoire in patients undergoing hepatic resection (without IL-2), (b) to analyze the TCR repertoire in patients undergoing hepatic resection after IL-2 therapy, (c) to analyze the effects of preoperative IL-2 infusion on the tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) TCR repertoire by comparing TCR V gene segment usage in IL-2-treated versus nontreated patients, and (d) to analyze the effect of IL-2 infusion on the peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) TCR repertoire by comparing TCR V gene segment expression in pre- versus posttreatment PBMC of IL-2-treated patients. With regard to the first objective, we observed an unrestricted use of V alpha and V beta gene segment subfamily specificities in tumor hepatic tissue and blood of patients undergoing hepatic resection. In addition, we found that some V alpha and V beta specificities were overexpressed in tumor compared with hepatic tissue and blood, suggesting that the corresponding T-cell subpopulations were expanded at the tumor site. In IL-2-treated patients, in whom the tumor and liver were heavily infiltrated by T lymphocytes, the TIL TCR repertoire was also highly diverse and roughly similar to that detected in hepatic tissue and blood, except for a few overexpressions. To analyze the effect of IL-2 on TIL, we next compared the data obtained in IL-2-treated versus nontreated patients. No significant difference between the two groups was observed. Finally, no major changes in the PBMC TCR repertoire were found after IL-2 infusion. Further studies are needed to identify discrete T-cell subpopulations in these patients that may participate in either tumor immune surveillance or active immunotherapy mechanisms triggered by systemic IL-2 infusion.