| Literature DB >> 28695483 |
M Centanni1, S Benvenga2,3, I Sachmechi4.
Abstract
There is a frequently encountered subset of hypothyroid patients who are refractory to standard thyroid hormone replacement treatment and require unexpectedly high doses of levothyroxine. In addition to clinical situations where hypothyroid patients are non-compliant, or where there is the possibility of excipient-induced disease exacerbation (gluten/celiac disease), therapeutic failure may be due to impaired absorption of the administered drug. The common approach to managing patients with unusual thyroxine needs is to escalate the dose of levothyroxine until targeted TSH levels are achieved. This approach can increase the risk for prolonged exposure to supratherapeutic doses of levothyroxine, which increase the chances of adverse outcomes. Repeated adjustments of levothyroxine can also escalate the costs of treatment, as frequent office visits and laboratory tests are required to determine and maintain the desired dose. Clinicians should take a systematic approach to managing patients whom they suspect of having treatment-refractory hypothyroidism. This may include searching for, and adjusting, occult medical conditions and/or other factors that may affect the absorption of levothyroxine, before up-titrating the dose of traditional levothyroxine therapy. Depending on the underlying pathology, another approach that may be considered is to try alternative formulations of levothyroxine that are less susceptible to intolerance issues related to excipients, or, in some cases, to malabsorption. The early discovery of these factors via a thoughtful patient work-up may avoid unnecessary thyroid medication adjustments and their consequences for both patients and clinicians.Entities:
Keywords: Hypothyroidism; Levothyroxine; Malabsorption; Refractory
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28695483 PMCID: PMC5680379 DOI: 10.1007/s40618-017-0706-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol Invest ISSN: 0391-4097 Impact factor: 4.256
Causes of treatment-refractory hypothyroidism
| Decreased bioavailability |
| Poor adherence to, or tolerability of, drug therapy |
| Maldigestion due to patient-related factors or behavior |
| Proton-pump inhibitor therapy |
| Gastric infection with |
| Intestinal malabsorption of |
| Luminal factors (e.g., food, coffee, and medications) |
| Intramural factors (e.g., short bowel syndrome, lactose intolerance, gluten enteropathy, inflammatory bowel disease, infiltrative enteropathy, infection with |
| Increased need for levothyroxine |
| Weight gain |
| Pregnancy |
| Increased metabolism of thyroxine |
| Other factors that can alter serum levels of TSH |
| Addison’s disease |
| Altered regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis |
| TSH heterophile antibodies |
| Inappropriate tablet storage |
TSH thyroid-stimulating hormone [3–6, 8]
Results from five published studies measuring TSH levels
| Optimal thyroxine therapy (%) | Non-optimal therapya (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Ross [ | 68 | 32 |
| Parle [ | 52 | 48 |
| Canaris [ | 60 | 40 |
| Hollowell [ | 67 | 33 |
| Vaisman [ | 58 | 42 |
aInadequate thyroxine therapy: 18, 27, 18, 15, 28%; Excessive thyroxine therapy: 14, 21, 22, 18, 14% [11–15]
Fig. 1Diagnostic flow chart of thyroxine malabsorption. + if test is positive, − if test is negative. EMA endomysial antibody.
(Modified from Centanni M, hotthyroidology.com 2007)