The diversity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is mainly caused by mutations that affect the gene encoding the gp120 envelope protein. Isolates differ to a large extent in the hypervariable regions of gp120. This study was undertaken to determine the degree of variation of HIV-1 env genes isolated from seven individuals with hemophilia B who became infected in association with administration of a suspected clotting factor lot. Two hypervariable regions and part of a constant region from proviral DNA of the peripheral blood leukocytes of these patients were amplified and the products of the polymerase chain reactions were sequenced. The sequences derived from five of the individuals displayed 100% sequence homology, 1 had two and 1 had six deviations from the consensus sequence. The alignment of the amino acid sequence so deduced revealed no comparable homology to any of these two hypervariable regions from a number of published isolates. The genetic variability of HIV-1 seems to be limited, at least in the early phase of infection, allowing the determination of close relationships between epidemiologically related strains.