pubmed-article:8888094 | pubmed:abstractText | Placement of a urethral catheter has been recommended to ensure adequate methotrexate elimination in patients with a neobladder; however, the need for this and its impact on methotrexate elimination have not been determined. A 53-year-old man with a cecal continent urinary diversion received intravenous methotrexate 30 mg/m2 on two occasions, with and without urethral catheter drainage of the neobladder. Serum methotrexate concentrations declined at a rate that resulted in 24- and 48-hour values falling below the accepted toxic concentration threshold of 5-50 mumol/L, and 0.05 mumol/L, respectively. In this man, who received low-dose methotrexate, catheterization of the neobladder did not alter methotrexate elimination sufficiently to justify its cost, risk, and inconvenience. | lld:pubmed |