Preliminary studies have demonstrated that some pituitary adenomas secrete immunoreactive interleukin-6 (irIL-6) when cultured in vitro. We have extended these studies by investigating 100 pituitary adenomas of different types measuring immunoreactive and bioactive IL-6. Tumors were cultured either as explants without fetal calf serum or as dispersed cells with 10% total calf serum. Fifty-three of the 100 (53%) pituitary cultures were found to release irIL-6 and in 44 adenomas examined, 32 (72.7%) secreted bioactive IL-6. In 61 explant cultures, 30 adenomas released IL-6, indicating autonomous secretion. The amount of IL-6 released by adenomas in cell culture was generally higher, although the incidence was similar to explant cultures. IrIL-6 was released by 7 of 14 prolactinomas, 15 of 27 somatotrophinomas, 5 of 7 corticotrophinomas (including 2 Nelson's adenomas), 1 of 1 thyrotrophinomas, 2 of 2 gonadotrophinomas, and 23 of 49 clinically non-functioning adenomas. Periadenomatous tissue removed from a patient with a corticotrophinoma was found to secrete IL-6 but in much lower concentration than from the adenoma tissue. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha and -gamma-interferon were not detected in the conditioned media. Four IL-6-secreting adenomas were examined by in situ hybridization for IL-6 messenger RNA, and three of these were positive with fluorescence present throughout the tissue examined. We have provided evidence that over half of pituitary adenomas secrete IL-6 which is bioactive and that IL-6 is synthesized within the tumor by the adenoma cells.