A patient with acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia was found to maintain a normal hemoglobin concentration both at presentation and preterminally several months later, despite a replaced bone marrow and over 80% circulating lymphoblasts on both occasions. Cell surface marker analysis demonstrated the T-lymphoblasts both at presentation and preterminally to belong to the T-helper subpopulation. In vitro culture studies demonstrated that the patient's T-lymphoblasts, as well as conditioned medium derived from these lymphoblasts, significantly stimulated normal bone marrow erythroid colony growth (CFU-E). These findings suggest that in this patient the preservation of erythropoiesis resulted from a helper effect exerted by his T-lymphoblasts.