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Desiccated thyroid

From Pharmacopedia
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Desiccated thyroid (also called natural thyroid, thyroid extract, or by the historical brand Armour Thyroid) is porcine thyroid gland, defatted and powdered, containing both thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) in a fixed ratio of roughly 4:1 by weight as required by the United States Pharmacopeia[1]. It was introduced in 1892 by George Murray and has been continuously prescribed since, predating both the isolation of thyroxine (1914) and the synthetic levothyroxine of the 1950s. Modern endocrinology guidelines prefer synthetic Levothyroxine as first-line replacement, but a residual population of patients and clinicians prefer desiccated thyroid for its T3 content and historical track record.

Thyroid (desiccated)
Armour Thyroid, NP Thyroid, Nature-Throid, WP Thyroid

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Summary
Common uses
Hypothyroidism0, Goiter0
Pharmacy
Starting dose
30 mg PO daily (1/2 grain); titrate by TSH at 6-8 weeks; 60 mg desiccated thyroid is approximately equivalent to 88-100 mcg levothyroxine
Preparations
15, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, 300 mg tablets (1/4 to 5 grains; 1 grain = 60 mg)
US FDA Max
No fixed maximum; titrated to TSH target
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral
Onset
TSH normalization 4-8 weeks
Duration
Steady-state at 4-6 weeks
Half-life
T4 ~7 days; T3 ~1 day[1]
Bioavailability
Variable; reduced by food, calcium, iron, PPIs[1]
Pregnancy
Synthetic levothyroxine is the standard-of-care in pregnancy; desiccated thyroid use in pregnancy is not well studied[citation needed]
Legal status
Rx-only in US
Purported mechanism
Desiccated thyroid supplies both T4 and T3 in a roughly 4:1 ratio; T4 is peripherally deiodinated to T3, but exogenous T3 supplementation produces faster onset and supraphysiologic post-dose peaks that synthetic T4 monotherapy avoids.0 Brand-to-brand and lot-to-lot variability in T3:T4 ratio is greater than with synthetic levothyroxine, which is why endocrine guidelines prefer the synthetic[1].

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 FDA Prescribing Information, Armour Thyroid (thyroid tablets, USP), Allergan, current revision. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=003444