Limitations of Levothyroxine Bioequivalence Evaluation: Analysis of An Attempted Study

The relative bioavailability and therapeutic comparability of four levothyroxine products (two proprietary and two nonbranded) were determined in an open-label, block-randomized, four-way crossover trial with no washout periods in 24 presumed hypothyroid ambulatory care patients who were considered...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican journal of therapeutics Vol. 2; no. 6; p. 417
Main Authors Mayor, Gilbert H., Orlando, Tony, Kurtz, Neil M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.06.1995
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The relative bioavailability and therapeutic comparability of four levothyroxine products (two proprietary and two nonbranded) were determined in an open-label, block-randomized, four-way crossover trial with no washout periods in 24 presumed hypothyroid ambulatory care patients who were considered euthyroid while on 100 g or 150 g of oral levothyroxine daily for at least 3 months. Patients randomly received each of the four levothyroxine products for 6 weeks at the same dosage as their prestudy regimen. Area under the serum concentration versus time curve (AUC), maximum change in serum concentration (C(max)), and time to peak serum concentration (T(max)) were calculated for total thyroxine (TT(4)), total triiodothyronine (TT(3)), free thyroxine index (FT(4)I), and thyrotropin (TSH) for each product, with and without baseline correction and normalization for tablet potency differences. Ninety-percent confidence intervals were determined for each paired treatment comparison. Using the response variable of values uncorrected for baseline (Hour 0), 90% confidence intervals for paired treatment comparisons of nonlogarithmically transformed AUC and C(max) (TT(4), TT(3), and FT(4)I) were within the range of 80% to 120%. However, using the response variable of baseline corrected values, no confidence intervals for TT(4) or TT(3) AUC or TT(3) C(max) were within the range of 80% to 120%. Confidence intervals for TSH AUC and C(max) based on both baseline corrected and uncorrected values were outside the 80--120% range. Results were similar when AUC and C(max) were normalized for tablet potency. Thus, results both within and between response variables were conflicting. Further, results normalized for potency using either response variable also failed to demonstrate bioequivalence, pointing to the serious difficulties inherent in levothyroxine bioequivalence studies. Independent consultant review of study design, execution, and data analysis was used to identify critical issues in the conduct of future levothyroxine bioequivalence studies. Numerous flaws were identified, including many that could significantly impact the interpretation of results. These flaws included evaluation of a heterogeneous population of hypothyroid patients with variable residual thyroid function, failure to achieve steady-state serum thyroid hormone levels, use of levothyroxine preparations with variable and unmatched potency, calculations based on a response variable that requires linear pharmacokinetics, and application of bioequivalence criteria when required assumptions have not been met. By the criteria applied in this study and using a response variable based on uncorrected serum concentrations, the levothyroxine products studied, although appearing to be bioequivalent, were, in fact, therapeutically inequivalent. Yet, using an equally accepted and perhaps more valid response variable of baseline corrected values, this study failed to demonstrate bioequivalence between any two products. Finally, differences in tablet potency must be considered as contributing to the appearance of bioequivalence for the TT(4) comparisons. For these reasons, this study, as well as others based on similar models, cannot support a recommendation to substitute levothyroxine products without careful retesting and retitration. The basis for this position is that interchange of therapeutically inequivalent products may result in over- or under-replacement of thyroid hormone, with the known potential adverse consequences. From an economic perspective, product interchange may lead to additional medical costs that outweigh the initial savings obtained by the product switch.
AbstractList The relative bioavailability and therapeutic comparability of four levothyroxine products (two proprietary and two nonbranded) were determined in an open-label, block-randomized, four-way crossover trial with no washout periods in 24 presumed hypothyroid ambulatory care patients who were considered euthyroid while on 100 g or 150 g of oral levothyroxine daily for at least 3 months. Patients randomly received each of the four levothyroxine products for 6 weeks at the same dosage as their prestudy regimen. Area under the serum concentration versus time curve (AUC), maximum change in serum concentration (C(max)), and time to peak serum concentration (T(max)) were calculated for total thyroxine (TT(4)), total triiodothyronine (TT(3)), free thyroxine index (FT(4)I), and thyrotropin (TSH) for each product, with and without baseline correction and normalization for tablet potency differences. Ninety-percent confidence intervals were determined for each paired treatment comparison. Using the response variable of values uncorrected for baseline (Hour 0), 90% confidence intervals for paired treatment comparisons of nonlogarithmically transformed AUC and C(max) (TT(4), TT(3), and FT(4)I) were within the range of 80% to 120%. However, using the response variable of baseline corrected values, no confidence intervals for TT(4) or TT(3) AUC or TT(3) C(max) were within the range of 80% to 120%. Confidence intervals for TSH AUC and C(max) based on both baseline corrected and uncorrected values were outside the 80--120% range. Results were similar when AUC and C(max) were normalized for tablet potency. Thus, results both within and between response variables were conflicting. Further, results normalized for potency using either response variable also failed to demonstrate bioequivalence, pointing to the serious difficulties inherent in levothyroxine bioequivalence studies. Independent consultant review of study design, execution, and data analysis was used to identify critical issues in the conduct of future levothyroxine bioequivalence studies. Numerous flaws were identified, including many that could significantly impact the interpretation of results. These flaws included evaluation of a heterogeneous population of hypothyroid patients with variable residual thyroid function, failure to achieve steady-state serum thyroid hormone levels, use of levothyroxine preparations with variable and unmatched potency, calculations based on a response variable that requires linear pharmacokinetics, and application of bioequivalence criteria when required assumptions have not been met. By the criteria applied in this study and using a response variable based on uncorrected serum concentrations, the levothyroxine products studied, although appearing to be bioequivalent, were, in fact, therapeutically inequivalent. Yet, using an equally accepted and perhaps more valid response variable of baseline corrected values, this study failed to demonstrate bioequivalence between any two products. Finally, differences in tablet potency must be considered as contributing to the appearance of bioequivalence for the TT(4) comparisons. For these reasons, this study, as well as others based on similar models, cannot support a recommendation to substitute levothyroxine products without careful retesting and retitration. The basis for this position is that interchange of therapeutically inequivalent products may result in over- or under-replacement of thyroid hormone, with the known potential adverse consequences. From an economic perspective, product interchange may lead to additional medical costs that outweigh the initial savings obtained by the product switch.
Author Orlando, Tony
Mayor, Gilbert H.
Kurtz, Neil M.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Gilbert H.
  surname: Mayor
  fullname: Mayor, Gilbert H.
  organization: Knoll Pharmaceutical Company (formerly Boots Pharmaceuticals, Inc.), Lincolnshire, IL, USA
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Tony
  surname: Orlando
  fullname: Orlando, Tony
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Neil M.
  surname: Kurtz
  fullname: Kurtz, Neil M.
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11850687$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNo1j8tKxDAYhYMozkVfQfIChdyTuqvD6AgFFyNuh7T5g5E2qdN0sG-vjLo6Z_GdD84KXcYU4QItqeSq4MqoBVqN4wchlBkqrtGCUiOJMnqJ3urQh2xzSHHEyeMaTim_z8f0FSLgh5Dgcwon20FsAW9_ynRm73EVbTeP4TyqIq5yhn7I4PA-T26-QVfediPc_uUa7R-3r5tdUb88PW-quhik0gU43QjJtfZcMcKBN8K2XjjlGBVtySyxRhrHuTeMGO9L1ShphWNeaKVKtkZ3v9Zhanpwh-EYenucD__32DdFkU2X
ContentType Journal Article
DBID NPM
DatabaseName PubMed
DatabaseTitle PubMed
DatabaseTitleList PubMed
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
DeliveryMethod no_fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
Pharmacy, Therapeutics, & Pharmacology
EISSN 1536-3686
ExternalDocumentID 11850687
Genre Journal Article
GroupedDBID ---
.Z2
0R~
23M
354
4Q1
4Q2
4Q3
53G
5GY
5VS
6J9
71W
8L-
AAAAV
AAHPQ
AAIQE
AARTV
AASCR
AAWTL
AAYOK
ABASU
ABBUW
ABDIG
ABJNI
ABVCZ
ABXVJ
ABZAD
ACDDN
ACEWG
ACGFS
ACILI
ACNWC
ACWDW
ACWRI
ACXJB
ACXNZ
ADFPA
ADGGA
ADHPY
ADNKB
AE3
AEETU
AENEX
AFDTB
AHQNM
AHVBC
AINUH
AJIOK
AJNWD
AJNYG
AJZMW
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALMTX
AMJPA
AMKUR
AMNEI
AOHHW
AWKKM
BQLVK
BS7
C45
CAG
COF
CS3
DIWNM
DUNZO
E.X
EBS
EEVPB
EJD
EX3
F5P
FCALG
FL-
GNXGY
GQDEL
H0~
HLJTE
HZ~
IKREB
IN~
IPNFZ
JF9
JG8
JK3
JK8
K8S
KD2
L-C
NPM
N~M
O9-
OAG
OAH
OCUKA
ODA
OHH
OJAPA
OLG
OLW
OPUJH
ORVUJ
OUVQU
OVD
OVDNE
OWU
OWV
OWX
OWY
OWZ
OXXIT
P-K
P2P
R58
RIG
RLZ
S4R
S4S
T8P
TEORI
TSPGW
V2I
VVN
W3M
WOQ
WOW
X3V
X3W
XXN
XYM
YFH
ZFV
ZZMQN
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-p567-ed7b45377f36203e3b4acf4d6d214c92a0a858d33f8208ff96b65a4d2f476692
IngestDate Sat Sep 28 07:36:35 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 6
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-p567-ed7b45377f36203e3b4acf4d6d214c92a0a858d33f8208ff96b65a4d2f476692
PMID 11850687
ParticipantIDs pubmed_primary_11850687
PublicationCentury 1900
PublicationDate 1995-Jun
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 1995-06-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 06
  year: 1995
  text: 1995-Jun
PublicationDecade 1990
PublicationPlace United States
PublicationPlace_xml – name: United States
PublicationTitle American journal of therapeutics
PublicationTitleAlternate Am J Ther
PublicationYear 1995
SSID ssj0012814
Score 1.3797064
Snippet The relative bioavailability and therapeutic comparability of four levothyroxine products (two proprietary and two nonbranded) were determined in an...
SourceID pubmed
SourceType Index Database
StartPage 417
Title Limitations of Levothyroxine Bioequivalence Evaluation: Analysis of An Attempted Study
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11850687
Volume 2
hasFullText
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3NT9swHLXGkBAXtJXBYBvyAXFpUzXxV7JbQYVqUFRpBXFDTmJLPZB0VYsof_1-tvNFtUnAxYrsfEh-jv38s98zQsecSALjDvGgQSQeFTL1IhglvSRkEddA0RUzAufRNR_e0F937K4-pdOqSxZxN3n-p67kPahCHuBqVLJvQLZ6KWTANeALKSAM6aswtuqkei_blXo09T7Pnwx1PJ3m6s9yCt-zP--gsvV2scDai6SftfsLY1HlyGdpN1ta05ZLOg2PiYZoq6LkI7lyM_-LqbHNWrSH3SqAawXFNiY7ybMqhn-5nNvDZNsmEN0edesAhBN0lxuluqrsNLlHeGFpXfSqQaPxNHtI6qSaDXRmDxYemOmwHg9fUbpmkF0WbaANEZqu7toEbIqFpCD07dFLxT1rkwdLIiaf0E7B_nHfQfkZfVBZC22Niv0NLXQydk7iqw6eNOq4g0_wuPYYX-2i2wb0ONf4BfT4JfS4hv4nLoE3D_UzXAGPLfBf0O_zweRs6BVHZHgzBiOcSkVMGRFCAw_pEUViKhNNU54GPk2iQPZkyMKUEA1EL9Q64jFnkqaBpoLzKNhDH7M8U18R9n0t_QTuSRIOvEYCbfWVT4QPhFmkgh2gfVdx9zPngnJfVunhf0u-oe26vXxHmxp-O_UDONwiPrIo_QUmjE0B
link.rule.ids 783
linkProvider National Library of Medicine
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Limitations+of+Levothyroxine+Bioequivalence+Evaluation%3A+Analysis+of+An+Attempted+Study&rft.jtitle=American+journal+of+therapeutics&rft.au=Mayor%2C+Gilbert+H.&rft.au=Orlando%2C+Tony&rft.au=Kurtz%2C+Neil+M.&rft.date=1995-06-01&rft.eissn=1536-3686&rft.volume=2&rft.issue=6&rft.spage=417&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F11850687&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F11850687&rft.externalDocID=11850687