Infection with the hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-associated delta agent (delta) was determined in a series of Italian patients with a diagnosis of acute hepatitis B (HBsAg-positive) progressive to chronicity. Twenty-two of 27 (81%) and 12 of 18 (67%) patients collected, respectively, in Naples and Cagliari, where delta is highly endemic, developed immunoglobulin M antibody to delta and/or rising titers of immunoglobulin G anti-delta during the initial acute phase of the disease. In each of them, anti-delta increased to a high-titered plateau indicative of chronic delta infection. Delta markers were found in none of the 13 patients collected in Siena, where the prevalence of delta infection is low. The great majority of the patients with anti-delta and a progressive form of HBsAg-positive hepatitis lacked the IgM antibody to hepatitis B core antigen. They were presumably unrecognized carriers of HBsAg who became infected by delta and developed hepatitis induced by this agent. In areas where delta is endemic, it may represent the true cause of seemingly type B hepatitis progressing to chronic HBsAg-positive liver disease.