We investigated the effect of exogenous corticotropin-releasing factor on plasma levels of ACTH and cortisol in 13 patients with ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas (Cushing's disease) and in 9 patients with other forms of Cushing's syndrome. In all patients with Cushing's disease, ovine corticotropin-releasing factor, given intravenously as a bolus injection (1 microgram per kilogram of body weight), caused a further increase in the already elevated levels of ACTH and cortisol. Successful transphenoidal adenomectomy was followed as early as one week after surgery by normalization or near-normalization of the ACTH and cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing factor. On the other hand, patients with the ectopic ACTH syndrome, who also had high basal plasma concentrations of ACTH and cortisol, had no ACTH or cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing factor. This difference in responsiveness between these two patient groups cannot be explained on the basis of different metabolic clearance rates of exogenous corticotropin-releasing factor, as shown by similar disappearance curves of immunoreactive corticotropin-releasing factor from plasma. Patients with Cushing's syndrome of adrenal origin who were hypercortisolemic during testing had undetectable plasma levels of ACTH and no ACTH or cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing factor. We conclude that stimulation of the pituitary-adrenal axis with corticotropin-releasing factor may be useful in differentiating pituitary from ectopic causes of Cushing's syndrome.