| Literature DB >> 31485974 |
Salvatore Benvenga1,2,3, Allan Carlé4.
Abstract
Oral levothyroxine (LT4) is the standard therapy for patients with hypothyroidism. Oral LT4 is available in several formulations, including tablets, soft gel capsules and oral solution. Multiple brand-name and generic LT4 tablets are available. In the US, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has developed a protocol for establishing bioequivalence of LT4 formulations based on serum thyroxine (T4) levels after a single oral dose administered to healthy volunteers. This protocol has been criticized by professional endocrinology associations for using healthy individuals and ignoring serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. In addition, the protocol did not initially correct for baseline T4 levels, although this was changed in a later version. There are concerns that the FDA's protocol could allow products with clinically significant differences in bioavailability to be declared therapeutically equivalent and interchangeable. Once a generic LT4 has been shown to be bioequivalent to a brand-name LT4, it may be substituted for that brand-name LT4 with no need for dose adjustment or follow-up therapeutic monitoring. Often, the substitution is made by the pharmacy without the physician's knowledge. Even small differences between LT4 formulations can cause significant changes in TSH levels. This may be a particular concern in vulnerable populations, including elderly, pregnant, and pediatric patients. Problems that can be encountered when switching between formulations or when original products are reformulated are discussed in this review. These problems include altered efficacy and adverse events, some of which can be caused by excipients. Patients should be maintained on the same LT4 preparation if possible. If the LT4 preparation is changed, TSH levels should be evaluated and, if necessary, the dose of LT4 adjusted.Funding: Merck.Plain Language Summary: Plain language summary available for this article.Entities:
Keywords: Drug substitution; Endocrinology; Hypothyroidism; Levothyroxine; Pharmacokinetics; Thyroid-stimulating hormone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31485974 PMCID: PMC6822816 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-019-01079-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Summary of practices for physicians and patients, with regard to switching levothyroxine formulations, that were proposed in international/national guidelines/statements [3, 13, 20, 21]
| For physicians |
| Patients should be maintained on the same brand name of levothyroxine product |
| If the brand of levothyroxine medication is changed from one brand to another brand, from a brand to a generic product or from a generic product to another generic product: |
| Patients should be re-evaluated and retested by measuring serum TSH in 6 weeks; |
| The drug should be retitrated as needed |
| For patients |
| Use the same brand of thyroid medication throughout your treatment |
| Thyroid disease often requires lifelong therapy and is best managed with consistent and precise treatment with the same brand of thyroid hormone |
| Your doctor may change your dose of thyroid hormone, but the brand of your thyroid hormone medication should always stay the same |
| When you go to the pharmacy, do not change the brand of your thyroid medication without checking with your doctor |
| You should not change your dose from one brand of thyroid medication to another, from your brand of thyroid medication to a generic product, or from one generic product to another without first checking with your doctor |
| If your doctor changes the type of thyroid medication you are taking, you will need to have repeat blood tests and visits to your doctor to make sure that you are on the correct dose. Your dose may need to be readjusted if your thyroid medication is changed |
FDA therapeutic equivalence ratings for currently available levothyroxine tablet products [25–33]
| Levothyroxine tablet product | Reference listed druga | Therapeutic equivalence codeb | Inactive ingredientsc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brand name | |||
| Unithroid | Yes | AB1, AB2, AB3 | Acacia, colloidal silicon dioxide, corn starch, lactose, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, sodium starch glycolate |
| Synthroid | Yes | AB1, AB2 | Acacia, confectioner’s sugar (contains corn starch), lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate, povidone, talc |
| Levoxyl | Yes | AB1, AB3 | Calcium sulfate dehydrate, croscarmellose sodium, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, sodium bicarbonate |
| Levo-T | No | AB1, AB2, AB3 | Magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, colloidal silicone dioxide, sodium starch glycolate |
| Euthyrox | No | AB2 | Citric acid anhydrous, corn starch, gelatin, magnesium stearate, mannitol, sodium croscarmellose |
| Generic | |||
| Levothyroxine sodium (Mylan) | No | AB1, AB2, AB3, AB4 | Butylated hydroxyanisole, colloidal silicon dioxide, crospovidone, ethyl alcohol, magnesium stearate, mannitol, microcrystalline cellulose, povidone, sodium lauryl sulfate, sucrose |
aA drug identified by the FDA as a product on which an applicant relies in seeking approval of an abbreviated new drug application for a generic product
bIf bioequivalence to a reference listed drug product is demonstrated, the product will be given the same code as the reference listed drug it was compared against: AB1 vs. Unithroid, AB2 vs. Synthroid, AB3 vs. Levoxyl; AB4 vs. Levothroid/Thyro-Tabs (now discontinued). One common code indicates therapeutic equivalence between products
cAll formulations except Euthyrox also contain colorants that differ according to tablet dose
Geometric mean ratios of pharmacokinetic parameters for baseline-adjusted total plasma thyroxine after administration of new versus old formulations of levothyroxine (600 µg) in healthy volunteers [70–72]
| Parameter | Euthyrox | Levoxyl | Tirosint |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 101.7 (98.8–104.6) | 92.5 (87.1–98.2) | 103.1 (93.5–113.6) |
| AUC(0–48h) | NA | 96.9 (90.5–103.8) | NA |
| AUC(0–72h) | 99.3 (95.6–103.2) | NA | 109.8 (100.3–120.3) |
AUC area under the concentration–time curve from 0 to 48 h, AUC area under the concentration–time curve from 0 to 72 h, C maximum concentration, NA not assessed