To determine the frequency of gout in our renal transplant population and to identify any predisposing factors, we retrospectively examined the outpatient records of all patients transplanted between January 1980 and July 1984 in whom the allograft functioned for at least 1 year. Two hundred forty-three charts were sufficiently complete to be evaluated. Of the 211 patients receiving corticosteroids and cyclosporine (CyA) as immunosuppression, 25 had at least one documented episode of gout (9.7% of total, 11.8% of CyA patients); no episodes occurred in the 32 patients receiving azathioprine and corticosteroid therapy (P = .05). The time from transplantation to the first episode of gout ranged from 4 months to 4 years. Of the patients without gout, 103 of the 186 receiving CyA (55.5%) and eight of 32 receiving azathioprine (25%) had asymptomatic hyperuricemia (serum uric acid greater than 8.5 mg/dL for men, greater than 7.0 mg/dL for women, P less than .01). The number of patients receiving diuretics in the CyA treated group was 142 of 211 (67%) v 12 of 32 (37.5%) in the azathioprine group. However, the increased incidence of gout or hyperuricemia in patients receiving CyA was not due to the effect of the diuretic alone. There was no correlation between the serum creatinine and uric acid in either the CyA or azathioprine group (r value for CyA group = -.06 and for the azathioprine group = -.26). Compared with patients receiving azathioprine, we conclude that there is an increased incidence of gout and/or hyperuricemia in renal transplant patients treated with CyA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)