Bone marrow specimens from 21 patients with hairy cell leukemia (HCL) who were entered into a program to study the efficacy of treatment with recombinant alpha 2-interferon were evaluated. Patients were treated with the interferon, 2 X 10(6) U/m2 subcutaneously three times weekly, and were scheduled to undergo bone marrow aspiration and biopsy at study entry and after three (21 patients) and six (16 patients) months of treatment. Bone marrow samples after three months of treatment showed an overall decline in cellularity, from an average of 77 +/- 20 to 57 +/- 22 per cent, with a marked decrease in the percentage of neoplastic mass (from 87 +/- 9 to 59 +/- 24 per cent). The bone marrow changes were associated with significant improvement in hematologic values, including hemoglobin levels and granulocyte and platelet counts. The bone marrow changes and improved hematologic values remained stable with continuation of interferon therapy. However complete bone marrow remission did not occur in any of the patients after three or six months of interferon therapy. The HCL cell mass in more than 60 per cent of the patients remained at or above 50 per cent of the marrow cellularity and dropped to less than 25 per cent in 14 per cent of the patients. In all of the patients increased amounts of reticulin fibers were identified in the bone marrow prior to therapy, and 89 per cent of bone marrow aspirations failed (dry tap). The amounts of reticulin fibers remained increased in most of the patients (91 per cent), with a high incidence of dry taps (73 per cent), after therapy. Interferon therapy also changed the tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase(TRAP)-positive HCL cells to TRAP-negative, suggesting inhibition of activity and/or production of TRAP in HCL cells.