Propylthiouracil (PTU) (original) (raw)
Continuing Education Activity
Propylthiouracil is an anti-thyroid drug used to manage Graves disease and hyperthyroidism. This activity will highlight the mechanism of action, adverse event profile, and other key factors (e.g., dosing, pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, monitoring, relevant interactions) of propylthiouracil pertinent for healthcare team members in the treatment of patients with hyperthyroidism and related conditions.
Objectives:
- Identify the mechanism of action of propylthiouracil.
- Describe the potential adverse effects of propylthiouracil.
- Review the monitoring necessary for patients receiving propylthiouracil.
- Summarize interprofessional team strategies for improving care coordination and communication to advance propylthiouracil and improve outcomes.
Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.
Indications
Propylthiouracil (thiocarbamide) is an antithyroid drug. The drug is a common therapeutic choice for the following conditions:
- Hyperthyroidism treatment
- Used if methimazole or radioactive iodine treatment is contraindicated or as an alternative treatment option in a patient with Graves disease or toxic multinodular goiter[1]
- Used before thyroidectomy or radioactive iodine therapy to treat hyperthyroidism
- In thyroid storm and thyrotoxicosis crisis (off-label treatment), to treat the hyperthyroidism.
- It is a preferred antithyroid drug in the first trimester of pregnancy.
Mechanism of Action
Propylthiouracil inhibits the production of new thyroid hormone in the thyroid gland.[2] It acts by inhibiting the enzyme thyroid peroxidase, which usually converts iodide to an iodine molecule and incorporates the iodine molecule into amino acid tyrosine. Hence, DIT (diiodotyrosine) or MIT (monoiodotyrosine) does not get produced, which are the main constituents in the production of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3).[3] Peripherally, it acts by inhibiting the conversion of T4 to T3. It affects the existing thyroid hormones stored in the thyroid gland as well as those circulating in the blood.
Administration
The available propylthiouracil tablet has 50 mg of the drug, and storage should be at room temperature. The dosage is as follows:
- Adults: Propylthiouracil is administered orally, initially as 300 mg/day in three divided doses every 8 hours (may reach up to 600 to 900 mg/day). After the initial treatment, the general maintenance dose is 100 to 150 mg/day. The dose is adjusted to maintain normal TSH, T3, and T4 levels.
- Graves disease (off label): PTU can be started as an initial dose of 50 to 150 mg three times a day
- Thyrotoxic crisis/thyroid storm (off-label): The American Thyroid Association recommends 500 to 1000 mg as a loading dose of PTU, which can be followed by 250 mg every 4 hours. Recommendations are widely variable, and comparative trials have not taken place.[4]
- Pediatric: Due to severe liver toxicity reported with the use of PTU, it is no longer approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in pediatric patients.
- Geriatric: Clinical studies incorporating the effects of PTU in patients over 65 years are lacking. PTU should be used cautiously in the geriatric age group, owing to an increased likelihood of co-morbidities and declined organ function in the elderly.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: 75%
- Distribution: 80 to 85% of the drug is bound to plasma proteins (lipoproteins and albumin are the major binding proteins), Vd 0.4 L/kg. It concentrates in the thyroid gland.
- Onset: 24 to 36 hours are necessary for a significant therapeutic effect.
- Duration: 12 to 24 hours
- Half-life elimination: approximately 1 hour
- Metabolism: PTU primarily undergoes metabolism in the liver to glucuronides or inorganic sulfates.
- Elimination: 35% gets excreted as metabolites in the urine.
Propylthiouracil and Patient Population Groups
- Pediatric population: PTU has been associated with liver injury in both adult and pediatric populations, whereas no case reports suggest liver injury with methimazole in the pediatric population. Hence, PTU is not for use in the pediatric population.[5]
- Renal impairment: Dose adjustment is not required.
- Hepatobiliary disease: PTU causes liver injury; hence, it is not used in patients with liver impairment. However, the manufacturer's label does not require dosage adjustment.
- Pregnant: PTU is a pregnancy category D drug. PTU can cross the placenta and can cause fetal cretinism and goiter. Methimazole causes fetal anatomical abnormalities; hence, if it is necessary to use antithyroid drugs in pregnancy, PTU is preferred in the first trimester with the lowest possible drug dose usage. Due to the increased reported risk of maternal hepatotoxicity from PTU, methimazole is the therapeutic choice in the second and third trimesters.[6][7]
- Breastfeeding: PTU is excreted in breast milk in small amounts and delivered to infants. There are no clear-cut recommendations for its use in nursing. (AAP suggests it is compatible with nursing while AAFP says it is safe with nursing).[8]
Drug Interactions
- Coumarins (oral): PTU inhibits vitamin K activity and hence increases the effects of oral anticoagulants. Therefore, PT/INR monitoring is necessary for such patients.
- Beta-blockers, digitalis, and theophylline: Patients with hyperthyroidism demonstrate an increased clearance of these drugs. When the patient becomes euthyroid, a decrease in the dose of beta-blockers and theophylline is required.
Adverse Effects
Acute liver injury: Reported cases have shown PTU to be associated with acute liver failure and death. PTU has a black box warning for this issue. There are cases reported in pregnancy, adults, and children. Hence, caution is necessary with its use, especially in the first six months of the start of therapy. Since the onset is unpredictable and variable, regular monitoring is not recommended. Educate the patient regarding the potential symptoms to come and visit the physician for anorexia, pruritis, right upper quadrant pain, nausea, vomiting, light-colored stool, and dark urine. Stop the drug at the first appearance of these symptoms and perform laboratory tests: biochemical (bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase) and hepatocellular injury markers (AST, ALT).[9]
Hypothyroidism: PTU can lead to hypothyroidism- weight gain, constipation, or drowsiness. Hence, routine monitoring of TSH and T4 is necessary to maintain the euthyroid state.
ANCA-associated vasculitis: There have been multiple reported studies in which PTU-treated patients developed small vessel vasculitis and positivity to proteinase-3 or myeloperoxidase. Symptoms include- fever, weight loss, myalgia, arthralgia, and paraesthesia. Idiosyncratic reactions like this usually start within weeks of drug initiation but have been found to occur years later as well. Most patients responded to drug withdrawal, immunosuppressants, and substitution with other thioamide drugs for hyperthyroid symptom control. Complications included: leukoclastic vasculitis, glomerulonephritis (crescenteric or rapidly progressive), alveolar/pulmonary hemorrhage, cerebral angiitis, or ischemic colitis.[10]
Hypersensitivity: Reports of severe hypersensitivity reactions like Steven Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis, and urticaria have been described.
Agranulocytosis: This is a potentially life-threatening occurrence with PTU in 0.2 to 0.5 % of patients. The patients should receive instruction to report any symptoms suggestive of pancytopenia – fever, sore throat, interstitial pneumonitis. The risk is at its highest in the first three months of treatment.[11]
Potential teratogenicity: PTU was a Category D drug for pregnancy under the old FDA system.
Other Reported Side Effects
- Dermatologic: erythema nodosum, exfoliative dermatitis, urticaria, skin ulcers, skin rash, alopecia, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Renal: acute kidney injury, acute interstitial nephritis
- Gastrointestinal: loss of taste, taste perversion, nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, sialadenopathy
- Neurological: neuritis, headache, paresthesia, drowsiness, vertigo
- Hematological: lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, leukopenia, aplastic anemia, lymphadenopathy, hemorrhage, hypoprothrombinemia
- Respiratory: pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage, interstitial pneumonitis
- Drug fever
- Lupus-like syndrome[12][13]
Observed Adverse Reactions in Laboratory Animals
- Carcinogenesis: pituitary adenomas, thyroid hyperplasia, and carcinoma after more than one year of continuous PTU usage.
- Infertility
Contraindications
COntraindications include a previous history of hypersensitivity to PTU or any of its drug components. Caution is advised in patients with hepatic impairment or myelosuppression and pediatric patients.
Monitoring
Laboratory monitoring of thyroid function tests should take place while the patient is on PTU therapy. Prothrombin time also requires monitoring in patients who are also on warfarin therapy concomitantly.
A key component of PTU therapy is patient education and counseling. The patient should receive counsel to:
- Contact the physician if they become pregnant or intend to become pregnant while on the drug for dose adjustments and monitoring during the entire pregnancy.[14]
- Report to the physician in case of any fever, drug eruptions, or infection.
- Report to the physician regarding any signs/symptoms of liver disease like nausea, right upper quadrant pain, and jaundice.
- Watch for the symptoms of agranulocytosis, which may include: sore throat, fever, chills, and infections of the gums or skin. It can also present with a severe drop in blood pressure.
Toxicity
There is no information regarding the lethal dose (LD50), serum level concentration of PTU associated with overdose symptoms, or the amount of single drug dose assumed to be causing overdose symptoms. Symptoms reported are nausea, vomiting, epigastric distress, headache, fever, and arthralgia. Patients are also at risk of developing ANCA-associated vasculitis, agranulocytosis, or acute hepatic injury may occur. In the event of overdose, consider the possibility of drug interaction or abnormal pharmacokinetics in the patient. Patients may also develop symptoms of severe hypothyroidism. Patient treatment is supportive as there is no antidote available, and the clinician should also stop the drug.
Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes
All healthcare personnel: clinicians, nurses, and pharmacists should be aware of the indications and adverse effects profile of PTU and function collaboratively as an interprofessional team. The clinicians should gather an appropriate medication history and consider drug interactions with PTU. All the healthcare personnel should educate the patients regarding medication-related adverse effects and the need for regular close surveillance. Patient education is a crucial aspect. Educate the patients that if there are any new symptoms, PTU should be discontinued immediately. Moreover, depending on the severity of symptoms, patients need to contact the prescribing clinician or go to the emergency department.
Clinicians will make the decision to dose PTU when appropriate. The pharmacist should verify all dosing by indications, perform medication reconciliation to check for drug-drug interactions, and report any discrepancies. Nursing will handle administration for inpatient care, serve as an initial point of contact for outpatients, as well as be able to monitor treatment effectiveness. All healthcare personnel should monitor for adverse reactions as well as medication compliance and therapy effectiveness. If any member of the interprofessional team notes an adverse event, drug interaction, or therapeutic failure, they should document it in the patient's record and report their findings to the other team members so corrective action can be taken.
PTU therapy requires an interprofessional team approach, including clinicians (MDs, DOs, NPs, and PAs), specialists, specialty-trained nurses, and pharmacists, working together across disciplines to achieve desired patient results while minimizing adverse events. [Level 5]
Review Questions
References
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Drugs and Lactation Database (LactMed®) [Internet]. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; Bethesda (MD): Dec 21, 2020. Propylthiouracil. [PubMed: 30000143]
Yoshihara A, Luo Y, Ishido Y, Usukura K, Oda K, Sue M, Kawashima A, Hiroi N, Suzuki K. Inhibitory effects of methimazole and propylthiouracil on iodotyrosine deiodinase 1 in thyrocytes. Endocr J. 2019 Apr 25;66(4):349-357. [PubMed: 30814441]
Ross DS, Burch HB, Cooper DS, Greenlee MC, Laurberg P, Maia AL, Rivkees SA, Samuels M, Sosa JA, Stan MN, Walter MA. 2016 American Thyroid Association Guidelines for Diagnosis and Management of Hyperthyroidism and Other Causes of Thyrotoxicosis. Thyroid. 2016 Oct;26(10):1343-1421. [PubMed: 27521067]
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Watanabe-Kusunoki K, Abe N, Nakazawa D, Karino K, Hattanda F, Fujieda Y, Nishio S, Yasuda S, Ishizu A, Atsumi T. A case report dysregulated neutrophil extracellular traps in a patient with propylthiouracil-induced anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis. Medicine (Baltimore). 2019 Apr;98(17):e15328. [PMC free article: PMC6831184] [PubMed: 31027105]
Rabelo PN, Rabelo PN, Paula AF, Conceição SAD, Viggiano DPPO, Antunes DE, Jatene EM, Paula SLFM, Dias ML, Reis MAL. Propylthiouracil-induced agranulocytosis as a rare complication of antithyroid drugs in a patient with Graves' disease. Rev Assoc Med Bras (1992). 2019 Jul 22;65(6):755-760. [PubMed: 31340298]
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Disclosure: Fnu Amisha declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.
Disclosure: Anis Rehman declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.