In the present study we examined by Southern blot analysis the presence of deletions and rearrangements of the p16 tumor-suppressor gene in B cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) in order to determine whether or not these changes can be related to a particular histological subtype and the different clinico-biological and prognostic characteristics of the disease. 103 untreated patients were enrolled in the study. Seven cases displayed alterations in the p16 gene: four cases with homozygous deletions and three with gene rearrangement. The presence of these abnormalities did not correlate with any specific histological subtype: three cases were small lymphocytic lymphomas (two of them reclassified as mantle cell lymphoma on the basis of the REAL classification), two diffuse large cell lymphomas and two small non-cleaved cell lymphomas (one of them considered to be a Burkitt-like lymphoma according to the REAL). These seven cases showed a trend towards worse prognostic indicators than the remaining patients, and this was confirmed in the survival analysis, since the presence of p16 gene abnormalities was associated with a shorter survival (10 vs 81 months, P = 0.0006). In the multivariate analysis, p16 abnormalities were selected as an independent prognostic factor together with the LDH and beta2-microglobulin. These findings support a role for the p16 gene in the pathogenesis of B cell NHLs and suggest an association of p16 abnormalities with aggressive forms of the disease that could be useful to predict the prognosis of patients.