Health
Related: About this forumLevothyroxine for thyroid from Lupin Pharmaceutical (Rite Aid)
Anyone taking generic levothyroxine manufactured by Lupin Pharmaceutical for low thyroid function might want to have their TSH, T3, T4 levels tested, especially if you're feeling a bit "off."
(Lupin won the right to manufacture and sell levothyroxine in late 2019Rite Aid began to offer it as their generic thyroid medication)
A few months ago I had my TSH checked and it came back mysteriously low. After a little digging I discovered the Rite Aid switch to the Lupin drug, and that it might be working on me differently (not all generic levothyroxines are the same, I guess).
I asked to be changed to the brand name Synthroid and had my levels tested again after a few weeks. They're back where they should be. I feel loads better too.
Synthroid may not be for everyone. It's about 2 1/2 times the cost of the generic. And there may be another generic out there that works just as well as the brand.
This isn't a plug for Synthroid nor a knock on Lupin. I just thought I'd share what can happen with different drug manufacturers.
elleng
(136,111 posts)I've noticed no changes, went from synthroid a few years ago, can't quite read the brand name I have, but it's not lupin. (CVS)
Mosby
(17,485 posts)Thx!
Kali
(55,742 posts)some people bounce around a lot no matter what they are taking.
my Doctor told me that's not usually the case.
Backseat Driver
(4,635 posts)This is why it's always good to do some research about those scripts your insurer "prefers." Did you at least get a kudo from your doctor for checking in for the change?)
Auggie
(31,804 posts)it was the doctor that suggested the test, without any prompt by me. And it was the office staff that alerted me to the variances in generics. I did the digging into Lupin and Rite Aid myself. A team effort, so kudos all around.
we can do it
(12,778 posts)nilram
(2,982 posts)Last edited Sat Apr 10, 2021, 02:51 AM - Edit history (1)
Even if you take another brand, whenever you switch brands, you need to get retested after a couple months. The binders or trace ingredients can affect absorption differently in different people. Of course, that's all baloney until you check it out with your own doctor.