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METHOTREXATE (MTX), SERUM
Test Code7658
Alias/See Also
"MTX, Blood
Rheumatrex®
Trexall™
"
Rheumatrex®
Trexall™
"
CPT Codes
80299
Preferred Specimen
"Serum or plasma
1 mL
"
1 mL
"
Minimum Volume
"0.3 mL
"
"
Instructions
"Transfer separated serum or plasma to a plastic transport tube. Collection is determined by dosing protocol.
"
"
Transport Container
"Red-top tube, lavender-top (EDTA) tube, or green-top (heparin) tube. Do not use a gel-barrier tube. The use of gel-barrier tubes is not recommended due to slow absorption of the drug by the gel. Depending on the specimen volume and storage time, the decr
Transport Temperature
Refrigerated
Specimen Stability
"Room temperature---14 days
Refrigerated---14 days
Frozen---14 days
Freeze/thaw cycles---Stable x3"
Refrigerated---14 days
Frozen---14 days
Freeze/thaw cycles---Stable x3"
Reject Criteria (Eg, hemolysis? Lipemia? Thaw/Other?)
"Gel-barrier tube
"
"
Methodology
"Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS-MS) "
Reference Range
"Therapeutic: 0.02-5.00 µmol/L
Critical Values:
Potentially toxic: after 24 hours: >5.00 µmol/L, after 48 hours: >0.50 µmol/L, after 72 hours: >0.05 µmol/L
"
Critical Values:
Potentially toxic: after 24 hours: >5.00 µmol/L, after 48 hours: >0.50 µmol/L, after 72 hours: >0.05 µmol/L
"
Clinical Significance
"Methotrexate, either alone or in combination regimens depending on the patient's risk factors, have been very effective in women with choriocarcinoma and related trophoblastic tumors. Cures have been reported in most individuals treated with low doses of methotrexate plus leucovorin.
Although methotrexate induces complete remissions in acute lymphocytic leukemia of childhood, it is of more value for maintenance therapy and is an agent of choice in combination with mercaptopurine. Furthermore, intrathecal methotrexate and cranial irradiation are administered routinely to patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia to prevent meningeal metastases.
Methotrexate is a component of combination regimens used to treat non-Hodgkin and Burkitt lymphomas and breast, lung, bladder, cervical, gastric, and ovarian carcinomas. High-dose methotrexate plus leucovorin rescue (with or without other drugs) is used to treat osteogenic sarcoma, some non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and (by some physicians) head and neck tumors.
Methotrexate is a primary agent in the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphomas and medulloblastoma. It has shown activity as a single agent against testicular cancer; bladder, lung, colorectal, esophageal, hepatocellular, and cervical carcinomas; soft tissue sarcomas; and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. For some of these neoplasms (testicular, colorectal, and hepatocellular cancers; soft tissue sarcomas and rhabdomyosarcoma) more effective regimens are available and are used much more frequently than methotrexate.
Methotrexate is an antimetabolite that combines with dihydrofolate reductase and therefore interferes with the synthesis of tetrahydrofolic acid necessary for DNA synthesis. From 40% to 50% of a small dose and up to 90% of a larger dose is excreted unchanged in the urine in 48 hours, a major portion of it during the first eight hours. Toxicity consists of bone marrow depression with megaloblastosis. Concomitant salicylate administration increases incidence of toxicity, due to diminished renal tubular excretion. The effect of methotrexate on normal cells may be reversed by administration of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate, also called citrovorum factor or leucovorin. This “rescue” makes possible administration of much higher doses of methotrexate than the body would otherwise survive. The initial half-life is two to four hours but the total body clearance (terminal) half-life is 8 to 15 hours.
"
Although methotrexate induces complete remissions in acute lymphocytic leukemia of childhood, it is of more value for maintenance therapy and is an agent of choice in combination with mercaptopurine. Furthermore, intrathecal methotrexate and cranial irradiation are administered routinely to patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia to prevent meningeal metastases.
Methotrexate is a component of combination regimens used to treat non-Hodgkin and Burkitt lymphomas and breast, lung, bladder, cervical, gastric, and ovarian carcinomas. High-dose methotrexate plus leucovorin rescue (with or without other drugs) is used to treat osteogenic sarcoma, some non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and (by some physicians) head and neck tumors.
Methotrexate is a primary agent in the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphomas and medulloblastoma. It has shown activity as a single agent against testicular cancer; bladder, lung, colorectal, esophageal, hepatocellular, and cervical carcinomas; soft tissue sarcomas; and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. For some of these neoplasms (testicular, colorectal, and hepatocellular cancers; soft tissue sarcomas and rhabdomyosarcoma) more effective regimens are available and are used much more frequently than methotrexate.
Methotrexate is an antimetabolite that combines with dihydrofolate reductase and therefore interferes with the synthesis of tetrahydrofolic acid necessary for DNA synthesis. From 40% to 50% of a small dose and up to 90% of a larger dose is excreted unchanged in the urine in 48 hours, a major portion of it during the first eight hours. Toxicity consists of bone marrow depression with megaloblastosis. Concomitant salicylate administration increases incidence of toxicity, due to diminished renal tubular excretion. The effect of methotrexate on normal cells may be reversed by administration of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate, also called citrovorum factor or leucovorin. This “rescue” makes possible administration of much higher doses of methotrexate than the body would otherwise survive. The initial half-life is two to four hours but the total body clearance (terminal) half-life is 8 to 15 hours.
"