Abstract

Abstract Levothyroxine (LT4) is the recommended treatment for hypothyroidism and the second most prescribed medication in the US. Several formulations are available, however most patients take LT4 tablets. Evidence suggests that absorption of levothyroxine tablets is decreased when taken with food, especially those rich in soy, iodine, and fiber. In order to avoid erratic absorption of LT4, it is recommended that oral formulations are taken on an empty stomach, 30-60 minutes before breakfast. However, compliance with this recommendation is often difficult for patients with busy schedules or on multiple medications, yet important in patients with conditions that are sensitive to changes in TSH levels such as pregnancy and thyroid cancer.There is evidence that oral liquid LT4 formulations that bypass the gastric dissolution phase of absorption may mitigate this food effect. ThyquidityTM (levothyroxine sodium) oral solution has demonstrated bioequivalence to Synthroid® under fasting conditions and allows individualized dosing flexibility. A bioavailability study was conducted to assess the rate and extent of absorption of the oral LT4 solution (100 mcg /5 mL) administered either 10 or 30 minutes before a standardized high-calorie, high-fat breakfast in an open-label, randomized, single-dose, 2-period, 2-sequence, crossover study. A single 600 μg oral dose of LT4 solution (ThyquidityTM, 30 mL) was administered to healthy adults either 10 or 30 minutes before consuming a 950 kcal, high fat (56%) breakfast in each study period and blood was collected for total (bound and free) T4 for 48 hours after drug administration. Treatment periods were separated by a 40-day wash-out period.The ratios of geometric LS means with corresponding 90% confidence intervals were calculated from the exponential of the difference between the LT4 solution administration 10 and 30 minutes prior to the meal for AUC0-48 and Cmax. An absence of food effect (bioequivalence) would be concluded if the baseline corrected 90% confidence intervals of this ratio fell within 80.00% to 125.00% for Ln-transformed AUC0-48 and Cmax.Forty healthy volunteers participated in the trial, 38 were included in the data analysis. There were no serious adverse events or discontinuations due to AEs. The geometric LS mean ratios of AUC0-48 and Cmax for baseline-adjusted LT4 were 88.74% (84.71-92.95%) and 85.07% (81.1-89.33%) respectively. The corresponding 90% CIs were included within the acceptable range for bioequivalence, indicating the absence of a meaningful difference in LT4 absorption when administering at 10 or 30 minutes before a meal.Based on these results, it may be possible to decrease the interval between the administration of Thyquidity (levothyroxine sodium) oral solution to 10 minutes before breakfast, thus offering patients further dosing flexibility. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m., Sunday, June 12, 2022 12:36 p.m. - 12:41 p.m.

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