BMJ 2005;330:1002 (30 April), doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7498.1002
Paper
DRUG POINTS
Ciprofloxacin interacts with thyroid replacement therapy
John G Cooper, endocrinologist1,
Knut Harboe, senior house officer2,
Sofia K Frost, pharmacist4,
Øyvind Skadberg, consultant physician3
1 Department of Medicine, Stavanger University Hospital, PO Box 8100, 4068 Stavanger, Norway,
2 Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stavanger University Hospital,
3 Department of Medical Biochemistry, Stavanger University Hospital,
4 Regional Drug Information Centre, Haukeland University Hospital, 5021 Bergen, Norway
Correspondence to: J Cooper john.cooper{at}isf.uib.no
Introduction
We report two cases of unexplained hypothyroidism in patients
taking oral ciprofloxacin (
figure). Nursing staff gave levothyroxine.
Prescription charts showed no drug administration errors. Patients
did not have nausea, vomiting, or diarrhoea.
Case reports
Case 1
An 80 year old woman with advanced thyroid cancer had maintained
suppressed concentrations of thyroid stimulating hormone and
stable free thyroxine by taking 125 µg levothyroxine daily.
She was admitted with a pathological fracture of the femur and
complicating osteomyelitis. After four weeks' treatment with
oral ciprofloxacin (750 mg twice a day), intravenous dicloxacillin,
and subcutaneous heparin, she complained of increasing tiredness.
Her thyroid stimulating hormone concentration had increased
to 44 mIU/l (reference range 0.4-4.4 mIU/l), free thyroxine
had fallen to 4 pmol/l (12-22 pmol/l), and free triiodothyronine
was 1.0 pmol/l (3.1-6.3 pmol/l).
Increasing levothyroxine to 200 µg daily had no effect. We reduced levothyroxine to 125 µg daily and stopped ciprofloxacin, and thyroid function tests rapidly became normal. Other drugs (alfacalcidiol, propranolol, ranitidine, furosemide, methenamine hippurate, paracetamol, morphine, and ondansetron) were unchanged. We continued to give dicloxacillin and heparin as thyroid function returned to normal (figure). The patient died of metastatic thyroid cancer three weeks after discharge.
Case 2
A 79 year old woman with rheumatoid arthritis, manic depression, cardiac failure, chronic obstructive airways disease, and hypothyroidism was admitted with a wound infection after a transfemoral amputation. She had maintained stable thyroid function tests on a daily dose of 150 µg levothyroxine. After three weeks' treatment with oral ciprofloxacin (500 mg twice a day), her concentration of thyroid stimulating hormone had increased from 1.6 to 19 mIU/l and free thyroxine had fallen from 22 to 13 pmol/l. Switching from concomitant administration of levothyroxine and ciprofloxacin to administering the drugs with a six hour gap resulted in rapid normalisation of the thyroid function tests (figure). Other drugs (zuclopenthixol, enalapril, bumetanide, prednisolone, folic acid, lactulose, acetylcysteine, hydroxychloroquine, paracetamol, ipratropium bromide, salbutamol, nystatin) remained unchanged.
Discussion
Oral ciprofloxacin may interact with levothyroxine if they are
given together. The most plausible explanation is that ciprofloxacin
decreases the absorption of levothyroxine. Antacids, laxatives,
colestipol, colestyramine, ferrous sulphate, sulcralfate, and
raloxifene have been reported to decrease the absorption of
levothyroxine,
1-3 but we have not found any previous reports
of an interaction between levothyroxine and ciprofloxacin. Neither
have the WHO Collaborating Centre for International Drug Monitoring
nor the manufacturer of ciprofloxacin. This interaction is important
for patients taking long courses of ciprofloxacin. It is prudent
to advise patients to take levothyroxine and other drugs at
different times.
Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
References
- Mersebach H, Rasmussen AK, Kirkegaard L, Feldt-Rasmussen U. Intestinal adsorption of levothyroxine by antacids and laxatives: case stories and in vitro experiments. Pharmacol Toxicol
1999;84: 107-9.[Medline]
- Surks MI, Sievert R. Drugs and thyroid function. N Engl J Med
1995;333: 1688-94.[Free Full Text]
- Siraj ES, Gupta MK, Reddy SS. Raloxifene causing malabsorption of levothyroxine. Arch Intern Med
2003;163: 1367-70.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
(Accepted 1 February 2005)
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