Exaggerated Levothyroxine Malabsorption Due to Calcium Carbonate Supplementation in Gastrointestinal Disorders

Author:

Csako Gyorgy1,McGriff Nayahmka J2,Rotman-Pikielny Pnina3,Sarlis Nicholas J4,Pucino Frank5

Affiliation:

1. Gyorgy Csako MD, Assistant Chief of Clinical Chemistry, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Warren G Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD

2. Nayahmka J McGriff PharmD, at time of writing, Primary Care Resident, Pharmacy Department, Warren G Magnuson Clinical Center; now, Assistant Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice and Administration, University of the Sciences, Philadelphia, PA

3. Pnina Rotman-Pikielny MD, Clinical Fellow, Clinical Endocrinology Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health

4. Nicholas J Sarlis MD PhD, Clinical Investigator, Clinical Endocrinology Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health

5. Frank Pucino PharmD, Ambulatory Care Clinical Pharmacy Team Leader, Pharmacy Department, Warren G Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a patient with primary hypothyroidism in whom ingestion of levothyroxine with calcium carbonate led to markedly elevated serum thyrotropin concentrations. CASE SUMMARY: A 61-year-old white woman with primary hypothyroidism, systemic lupus erythematosus, celiac disease, and history of Whipple resection for pancreatic cancer was euthyroid with levothyroxine 175–188 μg/d. After taking a high dose of calcium carbonate (1250 mg three × daily) with levothyroxine, she developed biochemical evidence of hypothyroidism (thyrotropin up to 41.4 mU/L) while remaining clinically euthyroid. Delaying calcium carbonate administration by four hours returned her serum thyrotropin to a borderline high concentration (5.7 mU/L) within a month. Serum concentrations of unbound and total thyroxine and triiodothyronine tended to decrease, but remained borderline low to normal while the patient concomitantly received levothyroxine and calcium carbonate. DISCUSSION: Concomitant administration of levothyroxine and calcium carbonate often results in levothyroxine malabsorption. While in most patients the clinical consequences of this interaction, even with prolonged exposure, are relatively small, overt hypothyrodism may develop in patients with preexisting malabsorption disorders. However, as the current case illustrates, the clinical manifestations of the initial levothyroxine deficit may not always be apparent and, of all usual laboratory thyroid function tests, only thyrotropin measurement will reliably uncover the exaggerated levothyroxine malabsorption. CONCLUSIONS: Decreased absorption of levothyroxine when given with calcium carbonate may be particularly pronounced in patients with preexisting malabsorption disorders. Once recognized, a change in drug administration schedule usually minimizes or eliminates this interaction.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

Reference30 articles.

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