During their maintenance therapy, children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia are treated with a daily dose of mercaptopurine for several years. A recent retrospective analysis has suggested that administration of the drug in the evening results in a better prognosis. We compared the disposition pharmacokinetics of mercaptopurine administered in the morning vs in the evening in 13 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Elimination half-life of mercaptopurine was significantly longer in the evening than during the day (423 +/- 142 minutes vs 176 +/- 22 minutes, mean +/- SEM). The area under the concentration-time curve (AUC0-infinity) was significantly larger in the evening (24,713 +/- 3536 ng/mL per minute vs 17,120 +/- 1474 ng/mL per minute). These differences were even more pronounced when comparing the area under the curve of the postdistributive phase (AUC300 min-infinity, 7724 +/- 2955 ng/mL per minute in the evening vs 2597 +/- 712 ng/mL per minute during the day). In a second study, 12 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia receiving mercaptopurine in the morning had their medication administration switched to the evening. Within 2 weeks there was a sharp fall in peripheral white blood cell counts in all patients (from 4.1 x 10(9)/L to 2.2 x 10(9)/L) mainly due to a drop in polymorphonuclear lymphocytes (from 2.78 x 10(9)/L to 1.05 x 10(9)/L). We conclude that the diurnal variations of mercaptopurine disposition result in clinically important myelotoxicity of the drug.