| Literature DB >> 33801406 |
Agnieszka Wiesner1, Danuta Gajewska2, Paweł Paśko1.
Abstract
Levothyroxine (l-thyroxine, l-T4) is a drug of choice for treating congenital and primary hypothyroidism. Although clinically significant interactions between l-T4 and food can alter the safety and efficacy of the treatment, they still seem to be generally underestimated by patients, physicians and pharmacists. This review aimed to investigate the effects of meals, beverages, and dietary supplements consumption on l-T4 pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, to identify the most evident interactions, and to perform the recommendations for safe co-administering of l-T4 and food. A total of 121 studies were identified following a systematic literature search adhering to PRISMA guidelines. After full-text evaluation, 63 studies were included. The results proved that l-T4 ingestion in the morning and at bedtime are equally effective, and also that the co-administration of l-T4 with food depends on the drug formulation. We found limited evidence for l-T4 interactions with coffee, soy products, fiber, calcium or iron supplements, and enteral nutrition but interestingly they all resulted in decreased l-T4 absorption. The altered l-T4 efficacy when ingested with milk, juices, papaya, aluminium-containing preparations, and chromium supplements, as well as observed enhancement effect of vitamin C on l-T4 absorption, shall be further investigated in larger, well-designed studies. Novel formulations are likely to solve the problem of coffee, calcium and iron induced malabsorption of l-T4. Maintaining a proper time interval between l-T4 and food intake, especially for coffee and calcium, or iron supplements, provides another effective method of eliminating such interactions.Entities:
Keywords: coffee; fiber; food; interaction; levothyroxine; soy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33801406 PMCID: PMC8002057 DOI: 10.3390/ph14030206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Summary of data from the most relevant studies investigating the influence of food on levothyroxine pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
| Study | Participants | L-T4 Dose (µg/Day) | L-T4 | Type of Food | Observed Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wenzel et al. [ | not specified | 100 | Tablets | not specified | ↓ L-T4 absorption (by 15%) |
| Lamson et al. [ | 48, healthy | 600 | Tablets | breakfast, 950 kcal | ↓ AUC0-48 h (by 38–40%), ↓ Cmax (by 40–49%) |
| Perez et al. [ | 42, hypothyroid | 98 ± 35 | Tablets | breakfast, 162–381 kcal | ↑ TSH level (by 64%) |
| Marina et al. [ | 14, hypothyroid | 200 | liquid form | breakfast, 132 kcal | no significant changes in fT4 levels |
| Morelli et al. [ | 59, hypothyroid | not | liquid form | patient’s usual breakfast | no significant changes in TSH levels |
| Cappelli et al. [ | 77, hypothyroid | 75 | liquid form | patient’s usual breakfast | no significant changes in TSH, fT4 and fT3 levels |
| Pirola et al. [ | 761, hypothyroid | 75 | liquid form | patient’s usual breakfast | no significant changes in TSH levels |
| Cappelli et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 75 | liquid form | Lunch | no significant changes in thyroid hormonal profiles |
| Cappelli et al. [ | 60, euthyroid | 106 ± 24 | soft gel capsules | patient’s usual breakfast | no significant changes in TSH levels, ↓ fT4 and fT3 levels (by 7% both) |
| Liel et al. [ | 13, hypothyroid | 50–470 | Not | fiber (whole wheat bread, bran, granola, psyllium) | ↑ TSH level (ranging from 7,4 to > 50 mU/L) |
| Chiu et al. [ | 8, healthy | 600 | Tablets | fiber (psyllium) | ↓ L-T4 absorption (by 8%) |
| Fruzza et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 50 | Not | soy-based infant formula | ↑ TSH level (216 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (4.0 μg/dL) |
| 1, hypothyroid | 112 | Not | soy-based infant formula | ↑ TSH level (248 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (<0.4ng/dL) | |
| Conrad et al. [ | 78, hypothyroid | 7.4 | Not | soy-based infant formula | 62.5% patients with TSH > 10 mU/L after 4 months |
| Bell et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 200 | Tablets | soy-protein containing cocktail | difficulty in suppressing TSH level |
| Persiani et al. [ | 12, hypothyroid | 25–125 | Tablets | soy-containing supplement | no significant changes in thyroid hormones levels |
| Chon et al. [ | 10, healthy | 1000 | Tablets | cow milk | ↓ peak serum TT4 level by 7.8%, ↓ AUC by 8% |
| Benvenga et al. [ | 6, hypothyroid | 200 | Tablets | espresso | average T4 ↓ 36%, peak T4 ↓ 30%, tmax delayed by 38 min. |
| 9, healthy | 200 | Tablets | espresso | average T4 ↓ 29%, peak T4 ↓ 19%, tmax delayed by 43 min. | |
| Sindoni et al. [ | 6, hypothyroid | 1.6–2.2 per kg | Tablets | espresso and barley coffee | failure to normalize TSH levels |
| Węgrzyn [ | 1, hypothyroid | 175 | Tablets | drip coffee | clinical signs of hypothyroidism (TSH level—8.27 mU/L) |
| Vita et al. [ | 8, hypothyroid | 1.6–2.8 per kg | soft gel capsules | coffee | comparable TSH levels for coffee 5 min. and 1h after L-T4 |
| Cappelli et al. [ | 54, hypothyroid | 73±14 | liquid form | coffee | comparable TSH, fT3 and fT4 levels for coffee 30 min. before and with L-T4 |
| Lilja et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 100 | Not | grapefruit juice | ↑ TSH level (63.7 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (6.4 pmol/L) |
| 10, healthy | 600 | Not | grapefruit juice | ↓ AUC (by 9%), ↓ Cmax (by 11%) | |
| Tesic et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 200–700 | Tablets | juice and mint tea | ↑ TSH level (> 100 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (5.9 pmol/L), undetectable fT3 level |
| Deiana et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 1.6 | Not | papaya | ↑ TSH level (25 mU/L) |
| 1, hypothyroid | 1.6 | Not | papaya | ↑ TSH level (from 0.8 to 15 mU/L), ↓fT3 and fT4 levels | |
| Singh et al. [ | 20, hypothyroid | > 1 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↓fT4 level, ↑ TSH level in 20% of patients |
| Singh et al. [ | 7, healthy | 1000 | Tablets | calcium carbonate | ↓ L-T4 absorption (from 83.7% to 53.7%), tmax delayed (from 2 to 4 h) |
| Schneyer et al. [ | 3, hypothyroid | 125–325 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (ranging from 7.3 to 13.3 mU/L) |
| Csako et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 175–188 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (41.4 mU/L) |
| Butner et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 150 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (21.85 mU/L) |
| Mazokopakis et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 88 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (9.8 mIU/L),↓fT4 level (0.2 ng/dL) |
| Irving et al. [ | 450, hypothyroid | not | Tablets | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (up to over 5 mU/L) in 4.4% of patients |
| Diskin et al. [ | 65, hypothyroid | 95–98 | Not | calcium carbonate | ↑ TSH level (23.8 ± 19.5 mU/L) |
| Zamfirescu et al. [ | 8, healthy | 1000 | Tablets | calcium carbonate, calcium citrate, calcium acetate | ↓ L-T4 absorption (by 20–25%) |
| Morini et al. [ | 50, hypothyroid | 1.47 | Tablets | calcium supplements | ↑ TSH level (3.33 ± 1.93 mU/L) |
| Benvenga et al. [ | 12, hypothyroid | 1.7 | liquid form and tablets | calcium carbonate | ↓ TSH for liquid form vs. tablet (2.15 ± 1,4 mU/L vs. 8.74 ± 7.2 mU/L) |
| Campbell et al. [ | 14, hypothyroid | 75-150 | Not | ferrous sulfate | ↑ TSH level (from 1.6 to 5.4 mU/L) |
| Shakir et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | 150 | Not | ferrous sulfate | ↑ TSH level (56 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (0,48 ng/dL) |
| Leger et al. [ | 1, hypothyroid | not | Not | ferrous fumarate | ↑ TSH level (243 mU/L), ↓ fT4 level (<0.52 pmol/L) |
| Irving et al. [ | 429, hypothyroid | not | Tablets | iron supplements | ↑ TSH level in 7.5% of patients |
| Benvenga et al. [ | 8, hypothyroid | 1.7 | liquid form and tablets | ferrous sulfate | ↓ TSH for liquid form vs. tablet (1.68 ± 0.9 mU/L vs. 8.74 ± 7.2 mU/L) |
| Liel et al. [ | 5, hypothyroid | not | Not | aluminium hydroxide | ↑ TSH level (from 2.62 to 7.19 mU/L) |
| John-Kalarickal et al. [ | 7, hypothyroid | 1000 | Not | chromium picolinate | ↓ L-T4 bioavailability (by 17%) |
| Jubiz et al. [ | 31, hypothyroid | 100 | Tablets | vitamin C | ↓ TSH level (by 69%), normalized TSH in 54.8% of patients |
| Antunez et al. [ | 28, hypothyroid | >1.7 | Tablets | vitamin C | ↓ TSH level (from 9.01 ± 5.51 mU/L to 2.27±1.61 mU/L) |
| Dickerson et al. [ | 13, hypothyroid | not | not | enteral nutrition | hypothyroidism subclinical (TSH—6–10 mU/L) or overt (TSH >10 mU/L) |
| Pirola et al. [ | 20, euthyroid | 1.6 | liquid form and crushed tablets | enteral nutrition | comparable thyroid hormones profile for both formulations |
↑ increase ↓ decrease.
Levothyroxine—food ingredients interactions - recommendations for health care professionals.
| Food Interacting with L-thyroxine | Sources of Evidence | Mechanism of | Effects of | Recommendations for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fiber | case series [ | non-specific adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to separate fiber and |
| Soy products | case reports [ | adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to separate soy protein and |
| Cow milk | non-randomized cross-over study [ | probable adsorption of | impaired bioavailability of | cannot be made due to the insufficient evidence |
| Coffee | case report [ | the sequestration of | malabsorption of | advise to delay coffee intake by 1 h after |
| Juice | case report [ | blocking of OATP transporters | malabsorption of | cannot be made due to insufficient evidence |
| Fruit | case report [ | unknown | malabsorption of | cannot be made due to the insufficient evidence |
| Calcium | case reports [ | unspecific adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to delay intake by 2–4 h after |
| Iron | case reports [ | unspecific adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to delay intake by 2–4 h after |
| Aluminium | case reports [ | unspecific adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to delay intake by 2–4 h after |
| Chromium | non-randomized cross-over study [ | unspecific adsorption of | malabsorption of | advise to delay intake by 3–4 h after |
| Vitamin C | uncontrolled clinical study [ | lowering of gastric pH | enhanced absorption of | consider advising concomitant ingestion of vitamin C and |