Two patients with hyperthyroidism and Graves' ophthalmopathy were treated with cyclosporin A (CyA), in addition to methimazole, after failure of steroid therapy. Eye disease showed favorable responses and TSH receptor antibody concentration showed precipitous decline in concentrations compared to a gradual linear decline in antibody concentrations observed in 10 patients not treated with CyA. These results prompted us to investigate the in vitro influence of CyA on the synthesis of TSH receptor antibody by a patient's lymphocytes (with highest antibody concentration) in response to thyroid membrane antigen. CyA caused a dose-dependent reduction of TSH receptor antibody synthesis compared to control cultures. The effect of CyA was more marked when added to lymphocyte culture at the same time rather than 24 h after addition of antigen, consistent with CyA's interference of early T cell triggering by antigen. This study emphasizes the importance of helper T cells in synthesis of TSH-receptor antibody by cells and suggests that the drug may be therapeutically beneficial in severe Graves' ophthalmopathy and/or Graves' hyperthyroidism resistant to conventional treatment.