Studies were undertaken to determine whether the anti-androgen, hydroxyflutamide, has anti-progestagenic activity by using implantation, maintenance of pregnancy, and decidualization as end points. Prepubertal rats were induced to ovulate with the injection of 4 IU pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin and allowed to mate. Mated females were assigned randomly to various treatment groups. Beginning at 0800 h on Day 4 of pregnancy and at 12-h intervals thereafter, rats received a series of 6 s.c. injections of 5 mg hydroxyflutamide in oil, or oil only. Localized changes in endometrial vascular permeability, indicative of implantation, were assessed on Days 6 and 8 of pregnancy, after an injection of Evans blue dye. By Day 6, implantation has been initiated in the vehicle-treated rats, but not in hydroxyflutamide-treated rats. Hydroxyflutamide treatment was terminated on Day 6, and implantation was initiated by Day 8. The weights of uterine dye sites in hydroxyflutamide-treated rats on Day 8 were similar to those in vehicle-treated rats on Day 6. The number of fetuses and placentae were similar in all groups on Day 19. The weights of fetuses in both hydroxyflutamide-treated and hydroxyflutamide + progesterone-treated rats were similar and significantly lower than those in control rats. Although there were no significant differences between vehicle-treated or hydroxyflutamide-treated rats in the proportion of rats delivering and litter size, the hydroxyflutamide-treated rats delivered pups a mean of one day later than did the controls. Endometrial decidualization in ovariectomized, steroid-treated rats, following artificial stimuli, was significantly suppressed in hydroxyflutamide-treated rats compared with controls. Injection of additional progesterone but not testosterone reversed the suppressive effect of hydroxyflutamide on the extent of decidualization. Thus, the anti-androgen, hydroxyflutamide, delayed initiation of implantation, fetal development, and parturition in pregnant rats and suppressed decidualization in pseudopregnant rats. These effects of hydroxyflutamide in the rat may, in part, be due to the anti-progestagenic action of this anti-androgen.