Patients should be instructed to take thyroxine 30–60 minutes before breakfast in order to maximise absorption. If this is too difficult or threatens compliance, the patient may try taking the thyroxine last thing at night on an empty stomach. Patients who still decide to take their tablets with, rather than before, breakfast need to do this consistently, to avoid fluctuating thyroxine concentrations. Depending on the fibre and milk content of the meal, taking thyroxine with food may require a larger dose to maintain euthyroidism, because of the decreased bioavailability.
While most patients take a daily dose, the long half-life of thyroxine lends itself to longer dosing intervals, such as alternate daily dosing. Once-weekly dosing is also possible although a slightly larger dose than seven times the normal daily dose may be required. This regimen may be suitable for poorly compliant patients who require supervised dosing.3
For patients, particularly children, who cannot swallow tablets, the tablets may be crushed in 10–20 mL of water, breast milk or non-soybean formula. The resulting mixture should be used immediately and any remainder discarded.2Breast milk contains only 20–30% of the calcium concentration of cows milk, making the likelihood of decreased thyroxine bioavailability less likely. Nonetheless, if breast milk is used to deliver the thyroxine, it should be used consistently, in order to minimise any variation in absorption.