Medications and Food Interfering with the Bioavailability of Levothyroxine: A Systematic Review

Ther Clin Risk Manag. 2023 Jun 23:19:503-523. doi: 10.2147/TCRM.S414460. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: Levothyroxine is a common prescribed drug. Many medications and food, however, can interfere with its bioavailability. The aim of this review was to summarize the medications, food and beverages that interact with levothyroxine and to assess their effects, mechanisms and treatments.

Methods: A systematic review on interfering substances that interact with levothyroxine was performed. Web of Science, Embase, PubMed, the Cochrane library, grey literature from other sources and the lists of references were searched for human studies comparing the levothyroxine efficacy with and without interfering substances. The patient characteristics, drug classes, effects and mechanism were extracted. The NHLBI study quality assessment tools and the JBI critical appraisal checklist were used to assess the quality of included studies.

Results: A total of 107 articles with 128 studies were included. Drugs interactions were revealed in calcium and iron supplements, proton pump inhibitors, bile acid sequestrants, phosphate binders, sex hormones, anticonvulsants and other drugs. Some food and beverage could also induce malabsorption. Proposed mechanisms included direct complexing, alkalization, alteration of serum thyroxine-binding globulin levels and acceleration of levothyroxine catabolism via deiodination. Dose adjustment, administration separation and discontinuation of interfering substances can eliminate the interactions. Liquid solutions and soft-gel capsules could eliminate the malabsorption due to chelation and alkalization. The qualities of most included studies were moderate.

Conclusion: Lots of medications and food can impair the bioavailability of levothyroxine. Clinicians, patients and pharmaceutical companies should be aware of the possible interactions. Further well-designed studies are needed to provide more solid evidence on treatment and mechanisms.

Keywords: L-T4; drug; interference; malabsorption; side effect; solution.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the grants from Beijing Xisike Clinical Oncology Research Foundation (Y-SY201901-0189), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2042019kf0229), the Science and Technology Major Project of Hubei Province (Next-Generation AI Technologies) (2019AEA170).