Seventeen patients who received allogeneic bone-marrow transplants from matched or slightly mismatched (in four patients) siblings were observed for at least 60 days or until acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) developed. All donor marrows after preliminary manipulation were incubated with 1 mg of the murine monoclonal antibody OKT3 before infusion in an attempt to deplete them of immunocompetent T lymphocytes (opsonisation). In three of the seventeen patients acute GvHD of grade II or greater developed. Two of these patients died, but they had disseminated cytomegalovirus infection as well as GvHD. Eleven patients showed no evidence of acute GvHD, and four had transient limited skin rashes (grade I GvHD). Opsonisation of T lymphocytes has reduced the incidence of severe acute GvHD in this unit from 79% in an earlier group of 14 patients to 18% when added to prophylactic methotrexate.