Endocrine practice : official journal of the American College of Endocrinology and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists 2024 Mar 28
Proton Pump Inhibitors Do Not Affect the Bioavailability of a Novel Liquid Formulation of Levothyroxine.   
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE
This study evaluates the impact of a representative proton pump inhibitor (PPI) (omeprazole), administered simultaneously or staggered, on the pharmacokinetics of levothyroxine (LT4) solution (Tirosint-SOL).
METHODS
This was a randomized, 3-way crossover, comparative bioavailability study in 36 healthy adults under fasting conditions. Omeprazole 40 mg delayed-release capsule was administered once daily from Day 1 to 6 (mornings, Treatment-A; evenings, Treatment-B; none, Treatment-C) to increase and stabilize gastric pH. In the morning of Day 5, a single dose of LT4 solution 600 mcg was administered. Blood samples were collected 0 to 48 hours post-LT4 administration. Noncompartmental pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated for total serum thyroxine using baseline-corrected data. Maximum concentration (C) and area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) were included in an analysis of variance to obtain geometric mean ratios and 90% confidence intervals.
RESULTS
For both comparisons (A/C and B/C), geometric mean ratios and 90% confidence intervals for all parameters were within the equivalence boundaries (80%-125%), indicating bioequivalence: for A/C, AUC 98.98% [94%-104%], and C 91.68% [87%-97%]; for B/C, AUC 98.94% [95%-103%], and C 94.90% [90%-100%]. Median T (time associated with Cmax) was similar across treatments.
CONCLUSION
This study demonstrated that Tirosint-SOL bioavailability is unaffected by coadministration of a representative PPI, given simultaneously or staggered by about 12 hours, compared to administration of LT4 solution alone. For hypothyroid patients on PPI therapy, administration of LT4 solution may reduce variations in thyroid stimulating hormone levels related to intermittent use of acid-reducing drugs and consequently the need for dose adjustments.

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Yue et al., PMID 38554774