Soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) levels were followed up after thymectomy by a quantitative immunoradiometric assay in 59 patients with myasthenia gravis (MG). Increased levels of sIL-2R were found in 30.5% of the patients before thymectomy. Serum levels were significantly higher in severely affected patients. Sequential sampling after thymectomy indicated a significant and progressive decline of sIL-2R levels within 2 years after surgery, which was well associated with clinical improvement or remission. The sIL-2R purified from sera of patients with MG had a molecular mass of 45 kDa as the normal sIL-2R. The decline after thymectomy of sIL-2R titers suggests a possible role of the thymus in the occurrence of sIL-2R in the periphery. Soluble IL-2R levels may represent a marker of disease severity in MG, which might be useful in the follow-up of individual patients.