Etoposide is bound to plasma albumin (94%). Previous studies have revealed altered protein binding of etoposide in cancer patients. This has clinical implications since only the free fraction is considered pharmacologically active. We have studied the etoposide protein binding in 11 children (eight acute lymphocytic leukemia, two malignant histiocytosis, and one oligodendroglioma; age 1-17 years) and 46 adult patients (28 acute myelocytic leukemia, eight lymphoma, one multiple myeloma, and nine small cell lung cancer; age 38-81 years). All patients were treated with etoposide 50-200 mg/m2 i.v. or orally. Plasma from ten healthy volunteers, 26-50 years of age, was spiked with etoposide, 10 micrograms/ml, and the protein binding was compared with that in patient samples. The free etoposide concentration was determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) after ultrafiltration at room temperature. The free etoposide fraction was lower, 2.5 +/- 0.6% (mean +/- SD), in the children compared with 5.0 +/- 3.6% in adult cancer patients. In plasma from healthy adults it was 3.2 +/- 0.3%. It is concluded that children have significantly lower levels of free etoposide compared with adult patients (P = 0.03) as well as with healthy subjects (P = 0.001), which is likely to affect metabolism and renal clearance as well as cellular uptake of the drug.