Résumé : A new mycophenolate (MPA) assay based on the enzymatic activity of recombinant type II inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (the pharmacological target of MPA) with excellent correlation with high-performance liquid chromatography has recently been released for the measurement of MPA plasma levels. This study aimed to (1) compare this new assay with liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) for MPA pharmacokinetic (PK) studies in different populations of allograft recipients given mycophenolate mofetil, (2) develop specific Bayesian estimators for this inhibition assay and test their accuracy, and (3) compare the resulting MPA area under the curve (AUC0-12h) estimates with those of Bayesian estimators developed based on the LC-MS/MS results. Sixty-four adult or pediatric, renal or lung transplant patients who were administered mycophenolate mofetil in association with cyclosporine, tacrolimus, or sirolimus at different post-transplant periods were enrolled as part of different PK studies. Eight hundred ninety-four patients' samples were analyzed in parallel with the enzymatic MPA assay and a reference LC-MS/MS method. Repeated analysis of quality control samples showed a mean difference of 6% between the 2 assays, whereas the results obtained in different populations of transplanted patients showed excellent correlation (r2 > 0.96) and small mean relative differences (2.0%-16.9%). The full profiles obtained with both assays were adequately fitted using either a 2-compartment model with 1 "gamma" absorption phase or a 1-compartment model with 2 gamma inputs. Several PK parameters were significantly affected by the analytical method used. Accurate Bayesian estimators could be specifically developed for the enzymatic MPA assay, using the same 3 concentration-time points (20 minutes, 1 hour, and 3 hours post dose) as with LC-MS/MS, with a median bias versus reference (trapezoidal) AUC0-12h values of -1.3% (range -45.2% to 40.4%), and 83% of the patients within +/-20% of the reference. These Bayesian estimates were significantly higher than those obtained with LC-MS/MS in patients on cyclosporine or sirolimus, but not in patients on tacrolimus.