| Literature DB >> 29434573 |
Camilla Virili1, Luca Giovanella2, Poupak Fallahi3, Alessandro Antonelli3, Maria Giulia Santaguida1, Marco Centanni1, Pierpaolo Trimboli2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the last years, levothyroxine (LT4) has been commercialized also in liquid formulation, which is less sensitive to the factors known to reduce the absorption of tablet LT4. To date, there is no robust information that liquid LT4 can improve pharmacologic thyroid homeostasis of patients with reduced efficacy of tablet LT4. This analysis aimed at achieving solid evidence that switching thyroxine treatment from tablet to liquid preparation improves patients' TSH levels.Entities:
Keywords: drugs dissolution; gastrointestinal disorders; oral liquid levothyroxine; thyroxine absorption; thyroxine malabsorption
Year: 2018 PMID: 29434573 PMCID: PMC5790785 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Diagram of flow of search strategy and results.
Overview of the studies included in the present review.
| Reference | Year | Study type | Patients type | Patients who completed the study ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vita et al. ( | 2014 | Prospective | Patients taking levothyroxine (LT4) concomitantly with PPI | 24 |
| Brancato et al. ( | 2014 | Prospective | Hypothyroid patients with elevated TSH on tablet LT4 | 53 |
| Fallahi et al. ( | 2016 | Prospective | Patients with subclinical hypothyroidism treated with tablet LT4 not reaching optimal TSH despite not known causes of malabsorption | 21 |
| Benvenga et al. ( | 2017 | Prospective | Patients with tablet LT4 malabsorption caused by calcium and/or iron supplements | 19 |
| Fallahi et al. ( | 2017 | Prospective | Hypothyroid patients, treated with tablet LT4, undergone bariatric surgery of Roux-en-Y gastric bypasses | 13 |
| Vita et al. ( | 2017 | Prospective | Patients with T4 malabsorption due to concomitant use of multiple drugs | 11 |
Articles appear in the table by the year of publication. All studies switched patients from tablet to liquid LT4 at unchanged dose.
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Figure 2Forest plot of meta-analysis (fixed-effect) of six studies reporting patients who switched from tablet to liquid levothyroxine (LT4). Mean difference was referred to TSH levels (i.e., mean TSH on tablet LT4 minus mean TSH on liquid LT4). One study (36) described two subgroups of patients, and we excluded that of four cases according to the studies selection criteria (see Materials and Methods). Risk of bias assessment was represented as green when there was low risk, red when there was high risk, and white when the risk was unclear.
Overview of the eligible studies subsequently excluded from the present review.
| Reference | Year | Study type | Patients type | Patients who completed the study ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pirola et al. ( | 2014 | Prospective | Hypothyroid patients, treated with tablet levothyroxine (LT4), undergone bariatric surgery | 4 |
| Giusti et al. ( | 2014 | Prospective | Thyroidectomized for differentiated thyroid cancer | 54 |
| Fallahi et al. ( | 2016 | Prospective | Patients with optimal TSH values during tablet T4 treatment | 141 |
| Fallahi et al. ( | 2016 | Prospective | Patients with autoimmune atrophic gastritis | 5 |
| Fallahi et al. ( | 2017 | Prospective | Patients with lactose intolerance | 5 |
| Peirce et al. ( | 2017 | Prospective | Thyroidectomized patients | 3 |
| Hommel and Delgrange ( | 2017 | Prospective | Hypothyroid patient, treated with tablet LT4, undergone bariatric surgery | 1 |
Articles appear in the table by the year of publication. All studies switched patients from tablet to liquid LT4 at unchanged dose. These studies were excluded from our analysis according to the studies selection criteria (see .