Plasma phenylalanine: Tyrosine ratios during high-dose methotrexate-citrovorum “rescue”

Abstract
We have measured phenylalanine and tyrosine in the plasma of patients with osteogenic sarcoma undergoing chemotherapy with high‐dose methotrexate (HDMTX) citrovorum factor rescue (CFR). During 14 treatments in six different patients, the phenylalanine to tyrosine ratio (PHE/TYR) at 21 to 38 hours was elevated over pretreatment levels. The observed increase in plasma phenylalanine is attributed to inhibition by MTX of the phenylalanine hydroxylase system of the liver, which is not folate‐dependent and thus is not corrected by administration of CF. A post‐infusion increase in PHE/TYR of 571% after 22 hours in one patient and of 410% after 30 hours in another were associated with marked MTX toxicity. The greatest increase in PHE/TYR seen in a patient who did not experience toxicity was was 249% in 21 hours. Thus, in this group of patients, there appears to be a correlation between evidence of clinical MTX toxicity and the magnitude of the percentage increase in PHE/TYR in the plasma, which indicates inhibition of a liver enzyme and thus reflects the intracellular concentration of MTX.