Rapid progression of infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to AIDS after seroconversion is rare; it has been associated with coinfection by cytomegalovirus or human T lymphotrophic virus type I. We describe an alcoholic patient whose condition progressed to AIDS 3 months after HIV-1 seroconversion occurred. Culture of peripheral blood mononuclear cells yielded a syncytium-inducing variant of HIV-1. T lymphocytes showed no spontaneous cytotoxic activity against HIV-infected cells, nor could such activity be demonstrated following stimulation with HIV-1 antigen in the presence of recombinant interleukin-2. We hypothesize that our patient's accelerated course was due to alcohol abuse, which may have suppressed T cell function and stimulated HIV replication.