This study was conducted to determine the prevalence and clinical association of anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA) in serum of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). ACA (IgG, IgA, IgM) was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the serum sample of 87 patients of SLE. The prevalence rates of ACAIgG, ACAIgA and ACAIgM were 62.1%, 52.9% and 35.6% respectively. The titers of ACAIgG and ACAIgM were positively correlated with the disease activity (r = 0.2763, P = 0.044; r = 0.3294, P = 0.018); ACAIgG, ACAIgA and ACAIgM were negatively correlated with complement C3 (r = -0.4737, P = 0.000; r = -0.2990, P = 0.017; r = -0.2758, P = 0.029); and ACAIgG was negatively correlated with complement C4 (r = -0.4079, P = 0.005). The titers of ACAIgA in patients with thrombosis was higher than that in patients without thrombosis. The patients with central nervous system involvement (CNS-SLE) had significantly higher ACAIgG and ACAIgM titers, compared with those without CNS-SLE. The results indicate there is a correlation between ACA titers and disease activity. In patients with thrombosis, the titer of ACAIgA is higher, and in patients with CNS-SLE, the titers of ACAIgG and ACAIgM are higher.