Fourteen children (aged 3 to 14 years) with average-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia were studied after an oral dose of 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) (75 mg/m2) administered alone and, on the next day, concurrently with oral methotrexate (20 mg/m2). When 6-MP was administered alone, both the peak plasma concentration (15 to 150 ng X ml-1) and the AUC (36 to 340 ng X ml-1 X hr) were highly variable. Concurrent methotrexate resulted in a 31% increase in the AUC (P less than 0.01) and a 26% increase in peak plasma levels (P less than 0.05) of 6-MP. The AUC of methotrexate correlated with the degree of increase in 6-MP plasma concentrations. These findings are consistent with previous in vitro studies demonstrating that methotrexate is an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, the enzyme that catabolizes 6-MP to the inactive metabolite thiouric acid. Although the increases in 6-MP AUC and peak plasma concentrations resulting from concurrent methotrexate administration were statistically significant, this interaction is probably not clinically significant at standard low oral doses of methotrexate in light of the wide interpatient variability in these pharmacokinetic parameters of 6-MP.