The objective of this study was to determine the prognostic value of serum homocysteine levels in patients with coronary heart disease. Homocysteine was assayed in 76 coronary patients with a mean age of 59.2 years hospitalized for myocardial ischaemia or myocardial infarction. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was performed in 47 (70%) of these patients during this hospitalization. The mean follow-up for these patients was 22 months (range: 11 to 67 months). In these patients, serum homocysteine levels were not correlated with the usual risk factors of coronary heart disease (age, sex, treated hypercholesterolaemia, smoking, diabetes) except for hypertension. It was strongly correlated with serum creatinine (R = 0.61; p = 0.0001). Eleven patients presented a major event during follow-up (8 deaths, 1 nonfatal myocardial infarction, 1 cardiac transplantation) and 16 underwent a revascularization procedure. The blood homocysteine level does not have any prognostic value for any coronary events. However, it is higher in patients who develop a major event than in those which do not (15.8 +/- 4 mumol/l versus 11.5 +/- 6.6 mumol/l, p = 0.05). Using multivariate analysis, taking into account age, serum creatinine and serum homocysteine, only serum homocysteine was predictive of major event-free survival (p = 0.02).