We investigated whether a decreased complement receptor expression or function of monocytes isolated from peripheral blood of 52 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and rheumatoid vasculitis (RV) could account for the previously observed diminished degradation of immune complexes by monocytes of patients with RA and RV. On average, monocytes from all patients expressed significantly less CR1, and degraded significantly less AC3b when compared with monocytes of healthy controls. In addition, monocytes from RV patients degraded significantly less AC3b when compared with monocytes from patients with RA. The expression of both CR1 and CR3 on monocytes of RV patients was lower compared with RA patients but this difference was only significant for CR3. No differences were found between AC3b degradation and the expression of CR1 and CR3 between patients with active and inactive RA. Using linear discriminant analysis on the variables AC3b, CR1 and CR3, 94% of the patients could be classified correctly as healthy controls, RA or RV, suggesting a true multi-variate relationship between these parameters and patients groups. Our results suggest that the diminished capacity of monocytes from RA patients to degrade AC3b is due partly to a decreased expression of CR1 and CR3.