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Liothyronine

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Liothyronine (T3, triiodothyronine sodium)
Cytomel (oral), Triostat (IV)

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Titration strategies

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Pharmacy
Starting dose
Hypothyroidism: 5-25 mcg PO daily (start low, titrate slowly); myxedema coma: 5-20 mcg IV q4-12h with T4 loading
Preparations
5, 25, 50 mcg tablets (Cytomel); 10 mcg/mL IV (Triostat)
US FDA Max
100 mcg/d typical
Common uses
Classification(s)
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral, IV
Onset
Hours (faster than T4); peak biologic activity 24-48 hours
Duration
24-72 hours
Half-life
~1 day (much shorter than T4's ~7 days)[1]
Bioavailability
~95% (oral)[1]
Pregnancy
T4 (levothyroxine) is the first-line in pregnancy; T3 is rarely needed.[2]
Legal status
Rx-only in US
Purported mechanism
Liothyronine is bioidentical T3 (triiodothyronine), the active thyroid hormone that binds nuclear thyroid hormone receptors with ~10× the affinity of T4; T4 (levothyroxine) is essentially a prodrug peripherally deiodinated to T3.0 Direct T3 supplementation bypasses peripheral deiodination, useful in myxedema coma (rapid clinical effect needed) and in some refractory hypothyroidism (combination T4+T3, controversial). Short half-life produces fluctuating serum levels with intermittent supraphysiologic peaks — one reason T4 monotherapy remains the practical standard[1].
Pharmacopedia is intended for reference. Nothing here is advice. In an emergency call 911; US Poison Control 1-800-222-1222. See the full disclaimer.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 FDA Prescribing Information, Cytomel (liothyronine sodium), Pfizer/King, current revision. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/010379s055lbl.pdf
  2. Alexander EK, Pearce EN, Brent GA, et al. 2017 Guidelines of the American Thyroid Association for the Diagnosis and Management of Thyroid Disease During Pregnancy and the Postpartum. Thyroid. 2017;27(3):315-389. PMID 28056690.