Drug Monograph

Liothyronine (T3)

liothyronine sodium — Cytomel (oral), Triostat (IV)

Synthetic Triiodothyronine (T3) · Oral & IV · Narrow Therapeutic Index
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~1–2.5 days
Onset
Within hours (oral); 2–4 h (IV)
Tmax
~2–3 hours (oral)
Bioavailability
~95% (nearly complete)
Protein Binding
99.5% (TBG, TBPA, albumin)
Metabolism
Deiodination; liver primary site
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Synthetic thyroid hormone (L-triiodothyronine)
Available Doses
Oral: 5, 25, 50 mcg tablets; IV: 10 mcg/mL
Route
Oral and IV (injection)
Biologic Potency
~4x levothyroxine (T4)
Pregnancy
Do not discontinue; adjust dose
Lactation
Present in milk; compatible
Therapeutic Index
Narrow
Generic Available
Yes
Rx

Indications for Liothyronine

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Hypothyroidism (primary, secondary, tertiary — congenital or acquired)Adults and paediatric patients, including neonatesReplacement or supplemental therapyFDA Approved
Pituitary TSH suppression in thyroid cancerAdultsAdjunct to surgery and radioiodineFDA Approved
T3 suppression test (diagnostic aid)AdultsDiagnostic: differentiating thyroid gland autonomy from normal functionFDA Approved
Myxedema coma / precoma (IV formulation)AdultsEmergency IV replacementFDA Approved

Liothyronine is the synthetic form of the biologically active thyroid hormone triiodothyronine (T3). Unlike levothyroxine (T4), which must be converted to T3 peripherally, liothyronine acts directly. Its rapid onset and short half-life make it particularly useful during radioactive iodine (RAI) preparation for thyroid cancer, where a shorter withdrawal period (2 weeks versus 4–6 weeks for levothyroxine) minimises the duration of symptomatic hypothyroidism. However, the ATA 2014 guideline does not recommend liothyronine monotherapy as the standard of care for hypothyroidism due to serum T3 level fluctuations and the potential for more pronounced cardiovascular effects.

Off-Label Uses

LT4/LT3 combination therapy for hypothyroidism: Some patients on levothyroxine monotherapy report persistent symptoms despite normalised TSH. Addition of low-dose liothyronine (5–10 mcg) with a corresponding reduction in levothyroxine has been studied, though the ATA 2014 guideline found no consistently strong evidence of superiority over levothyroxine monotherapy. (Evidence quality: Moderate — conflicting)

Augmentation of antidepressants in treatment-resistant depression: Liothyronine 25–50 mcg/day has been used to augment SSRIs and tricyclics, particularly in treatment-resistant major depressive disorder, supported by the STAR*D trial data. (Evidence quality: Moderate)

Thyroid hormone withdrawal protocol for RAI scanning: Given for 2–4 weeks after levothyroxine discontinuation, then stopped 2 weeks before RAI to allow TSH to rise while minimising hypothyroid symptoms. (Evidence quality: High)

Dose

Liothyronine Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Mild hypothyroidism — otherwise healthy adult25 mcg once dailyIncrease by 25 mcg q1–2 weeks to 25–75 mcg/day75 mcg/day (usual)Not first-line; levothyroxine is preferred for long-term replacement (ATA 2014)
25 mcg T3 ≈ 100 mcg T4 ≈ 1 grain desiccated thyroid in approximate equivalence
Severe / myxedema hypothyroidism — oral5 mcg once dailyIncrease by 5–10 mcg q1–2 weeks; once 25 mcg/day reached, increase by 5–25 mcg q1–2 weeks. Usual maintenance 50–100 mcg/day100 mcg/day (usual ceiling)Gradual titration critical to avoid cardiac events; slower escalation than mild hypothyroidism
Higher maintenance than mild hypothyroidism reflects greater hormone deficit (FDA PI)
Elderly or known cardiac disease5 mcg once dailyIncrease by 5 mcg q2 weeksIndividualised (minimise cardiovascular risk)Rapid onset of T3 poses higher cardiac risk than levothyroxine
If euthyroid state aggravates cardiac disease, reduce dose (FDA PI)
Thyroid cancer — RAI preparation withdrawal protocol25 mcg BID or TID (replace levothyroxine)Continue for 2–4 weeks after stopping levothyroxine75 mcg/day typicallyStop liothyronine 2 weeks before RAI; allows TSH to rise >30 mIU/L for adequate RAI uptake
Shorter withdrawal period (2 weeks) versus levothyroxine (4–6 weeks); minimises hypothyroid symptoms
T3 suppression test (diagnostic)75–100 mcg daily for 7 daysSingle 7-day course100 mcg/dayMeasure radioiodine uptake before and after; ≥50% suppression indicates normal thyroid-pituitary axis (FDA PI)
LT4/LT3 combination therapy (off-label adjunct)5–10 mcg once or twice dailyTitrate to normalise TSH; reduce levothyroxine by ~25–50 mcg per 5–10 mcg T3 addedIndividualised; aim for physiologic T4:T3 ratio ~13:1 to 20:1Specialist-initiated only; limited evidence of benefit over LT4 monotherapy (ATA 2014)
Consider divided dosing (BID) to minimise peak T3 fluctuations
Myxedema coma / precoma — IV25–50 mcg IV (initial); 10–20 mcg if cardiac diseaseSubsequent doses q4–12h based on clinical response; target ≥65 mcg/day in initial daysLimited experience >100 mcg/dayICU setting only; ≥65 mcg/day in initial days associated with lower mortality (Triostat PI)
IV only; do not give IM or SC. Switch to oral when clinically stable. Give glucocorticoids concurrently

Paediatric Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Congenital hypothyroidism — neonates5 mcg once dailyIncrease by 5 mcg q3–4 days to response~20 mcg/day (infants a few months old)Levothyroxine is strongly preferred for congenital hypothyroidism; liothyronine lacks long-term developmental data
At 1 year, ~50 mcg/day may be needed; above 3 years, adult doses may be appropriate (FDA PI)
Clinical Pearl: Dose Equivalence and Switching

When switching from levothyroxine to liothyronine, an approximate equivalence of 25 mcg liothyronine to 100 mcg levothyroxine is commonly used, though individual variability is substantial. Discontinue levothyroxine and initiate liothyronine at a low dose, titrating gradually. Residual effects from the long half-life of levothyroxine may persist for several weeks after switching, during which careful monitoring is essential. Liothyronine has a biologic potency approximately 4 times that of levothyroxine, so even small dose changes produce relatively large clinical effects.

PK

Pharmacology of Liothyronine

Mechanism of Action

Liothyronine sodium is the synthetic sodium salt of L-triiodothyronine (T3), the most metabolically active thyroid hormone. Unlike levothyroxine, which serves as a prohormone requiring peripheral deiodination to T3, liothyronine directly binds to nuclear thyroid hormone receptors (TR-alpha and TR-beta) in target tissues. This receptor-DNA complex activates gene transcription and protein synthesis, producing the metabolic effects of thyroid hormone: increased basal metabolic rate, enhanced oxygen consumption, stimulation of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, protein synthesis, and regulation of growth and differentiation. The rapid onset and shorter duration compared to levothyroxine are explained by T3’s lower affinity for serum binding proteins (particularly TBG), allowing faster tissue uptake but also more rapid clearance from the circulation. This produces pronounced peaks and troughs in serum T3 levels with once-daily dosing.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption~95% absorbed orally within 4 hours (FDA PI). Tmax ~2–3 hours. Not significantly affected by food compared to levothyroxine.Near-complete oral absorption makes liothyronine reliable for GI-compromised patients where levothyroxine absorption is impaired (e.g., coeliac disease, bariatric surgery).
Distribution99.5% protein bound (TBG, TBPA, albumin). Lower binding affinity to TBG than T4, resulting in a higher free fraction (~0.5% free vs ~0.03% for T4).Lower protein binding explains faster tissue uptake, faster onset of action, and wider serum level fluctuations compared to levothyroxine.
MetabolismSequential deiodination in liver and peripheral tissues. Also undergoes glucuronidation, sulfation, and enterohepatic recirculation.Hepatic enzyme inducers (phenytoin, carbamazepine, rifampicin) increase T3 clearance. Hepatic or renal impairment may alter metabolism.
Eliminationt½ ~1–2.5 days (FDA PI: ~2.5 days; PK studies: elimination phase ~23 h). Primarily renal (~80%) with ~20% faecal excretion.Shorter half-life than T4 supports its use in the RAI withdrawal protocol (2-week stop versus 4–6 weeks for levothyroxine). However, it also means serum levels fluctuate more and steady-state is reached faster (~5–7 days).
SE

Side Effects of Liothyronine

As with levothyroxine, adverse effects of liothyronine are primarily those of iatrogenic hyperthyroidism resulting from overreplacement. Due to the rapid onset and peak-trough kinetics of T3, cardiovascular side effects are more pronounced and may occur even at therapeutic doses, particularly in elderly patients or those with pre-existing cardiac disease.

≥10%Very Common (Overreplacement Effects)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Palpitations / tachycardia≥10% (more pronounced than with LT4)Occurs rapidly due to direct T3 action on cardiac beta-receptors; peak effect within hours of dosing; dose-dependent
Tremor / nervousness / insomnia≥10% when TSH suppressedMay be transient at initiation; related to T3 peak levels rather than steady-state. Divided dosing (BID) may reduce
Heat intolerance / sweating≥10%Classic hyperthyroid symptom; dose reduction required
Weight loss / increased appetite≥10%Expected metabolic effect of excess T3; reverses with dose correction
1–10%Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Headache1–10%May occur with initiation or dose changes; usually self-limiting
Diarrhoea1–10%Increased GI motility from excess thyroid hormone; dose-related
Menstrual irregularities1–5%Both over- and underreplacement disrupt menstrual cycle; resolves with dose correction
Muscle weakness / cramps1–5%More common during overreplacement; may reflect thyrotoxic myopathy
Skin rash<1%Rare; may be excipient-related; consider formulation switch
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Atrial fibrillation / arrhythmiasHigher risk than with LT4 due to T3 peak levelsHours to days after initiation or dose increaseReduce dose or withhold; cardiology evaluation; ECG monitoring
Angina pectoris / myocardial infarctionRare; elevated risk in patients with coronary artery diseaseHours to daysWithhold liothyronine; stabilise cardiac status; restart at lower dose or switch to levothyroxine
Accelerated bone lossRisk with chronic supraphysiologic dosingMonths to yearsUse lowest effective dose; DEXA monitoring in postmenopausal women; calcium and vitamin D supplementation
Acute adrenal crisisRare; in patients with undiagnosed adrenal insufficiencyDays after initiationTreat AI with glucocorticoids BEFORE starting liothyronine; contraindicated in uncorrected AI
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation
Planned Discontinuation
Common
Context: Liothyronine is frequently discontinued as part of the RAI withdrawal protocol or after switching to levothyroxine for long-term management. Its short half-life allows rapid clearance.
Switch to LT4
Most common transition
Key driver: T3 peak-trough fluctuations, more pronounced cardiovascular effects, and need for multiple daily doses lead most clinicians to prefer levothyroxine for long-term therapy.
Cardiovascular Risk: Greater with T3 than T4

The rapid onset and direct cardiac effects of liothyronine (T3 peaks within 2–3 hours of dosing) create a higher risk of cardiac events compared to levothyroxine. In patients with pre-existing coronary artery disease or the elderly, start at the lowest dose (5 mcg/day) and titrate slowly. If cardiac symptoms develop at any dose, reduce or discontinue liothyronine and consider switching to levothyroxine, which provides more stable hormone levels.

Int

Drug Interactions with Liothyronine

Liothyronine shares the same pharmacodynamic interaction profile as levothyroxine. However, because T3 is less affected by GI absorption interference (95% absorption versus 40–80% for T4), interactions that reduce levothyroxine efficacy through impaired absorption (calcium, iron, PPIs) are less clinically significant with liothyronine. Interactions affecting hepatic metabolism, protein binding, and anticoagulant response remain important.

MajorWarfarin / Oral Anticoagulants
MechanismThyroid hormones increase catabolism of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors
EffectEnhanced anticoagulant effect; increased bleeding risk as euthyroid state is achieved
ManagementMonitor INR closely when initiating or adjusting liothyronine; reduce warfarin dose as needed
FDA PI
MajorSodium Iodide I-131 (Radioactive Iodine)
MechanismThyroid hormone suppresses TSH, reducing RAI uptake by thyroid tissue
EffectDecreased therapeutic efficacy of RAI therapy
ManagementDiscontinue liothyronine at least 2 weeks before RAI administration to allow TSH to rise
FDA PI
ModerateSympathomimetic Amines (epinephrine, pseudoephedrine)
MechanismT3 increases catecholamine receptor sensitivity
EffectIncreased risk of coronary insufficiency, arrhythmia, and hypertension
ManagementUse with caution; monitor cardiovascular status closely
FDA PI
ModerateTricyclic Antidepressants
MechanismEnhanced catecholamine sensitivity; additive cardiac effects
EffectIncreased risk of arrhythmias and CNS stimulation
ManagementMonitor cardiac status; use lower doses of both agents when co-prescribed
FDA PI
ModerateDigoxin
MechanismThyroid hormones reduce therapeutic effects of digitalis glycosides
EffectDecreased serum digoxin levels as hypothyroid patient becomes euthyroid; higher digoxin dose may be needed
ManagementMonitor serum digoxin levels and clinical response; adjust digoxin dose as thyroid status changes
FDA PI
ModerateAntidiabetic Agents (insulin, sulfonylureas)
MechanismThyroid hormone replacement increases metabolic rate and glucose turnover
EffectMay worsen glycaemic control; increased antidiabetic dose may be needed
ManagementMonitor blood glucose closely when initiating or adjusting liothyronine in diabetic patients
FDA PI
ModerateOestrogen / Oral Contraceptives
MechanismOestrogen increases TBG synthesis; T3 is less affected than T4 but total T3 may change
EffectMay increase liothyronine requirements; recheck thyroid function
ManagementMonitor thyroid function 4–6 weeks after starting or stopping oestrogen
FDA PI
MinorTheophylline
MechanismLiothyronine increases theophylline elimination
EffectDecreased theophylline levels as hypothyroid patient becomes euthyroid
ManagementMonitor theophylline levels during thyroid status changes; adjust dose as needed
Medscape
Mon

Monitoring for Liothyronine

  • Serum TSH6–8 weeks after initiation or dose change; q6–12 months when stable
    Routine
    Primary monitoring parameter for primary hypothyroidism. TSH is NOT reliable for secondary/tertiary hypothyroidism or during the immediate hours after dosing (T3 peaks suppress TSH transiently). Draw blood before the morning dose for consistency.
  • Serum Total T3With TSH at each assessment
    Routine
    More appropriate than TSH for assessing immediate response. Draw trough level (before morning dose). In secondary/tertiary hypothyroidism, T3 is the primary target for dose adequacy (FDA PI).
  • Cardiac StatusBaseline ECG in elderly/cardiac patients; symptoms at every visit
    Trigger-based
    Monitor for palpitations, chest pain, dyspnoea, and new arrhythmias. T3 has more pronounced cardiac effects than T4 due to direct beta-receptor stimulation. Continuous cardiac monitoring for IV liothyronine in myxedema coma.
  • Bone DensityBaseline and periodic in postmenopausal women on chronic therapy
    Trigger-based
    Chronic supraphysiologic thyroid hormone accelerates bone turnover. Use the lowest effective dose and monitor with DEXA.
  • Paediatric GrowthEvery visit in children
    Routine
    Height, weight, developmental milestones, and bone age. To minimise hyperactivity risk, start at one-fourth the full replacement dose and increase weekly by one-fourth increments (FDA PI).
  • INR (if on warfarin)Closely during initiation and dose changes
    Trigger-based
    Thyroid hormone status changes alter warfarin requirements; check INR frequently until thyroid status is stable.
  • Blood Glucose (diabetics)Increased frequency during thyroid status changes
    Trigger-based
    Correction of hypothyroidism increases metabolic rate and may worsen glycaemic control; adjust antidiabetic therapy accordingly.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Uncorrected adrenal cortical insufficiency — thyroid hormone increases cortisol clearance and can precipitate adrenal crisis; treat with glucocorticoids first (FDA PI)
  • Untreated thyrotoxicosis — exogenous T3 will worsen hyperthyroid state
  • Known hypersensitivity to liothyronine sodium or any excipient

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Acute myocardial infarction — T3’s rapid cardiac effects pose a high risk; withhold unless clinically essential
  • Severe angina pectoris or uncontrolled arrhythmias — if required, start at 5 mcg/day with close cardiac monitoring (FDA PI)

Use with Caution

  • Elderly patients — start 5 mcg/day; increase by 5 mcg q2 weeks; greater likelihood of occult cardiac disease
  • Cardiovascular disease — rapid onset of T3 increases myocardial oxygen demand more acutely than T4
  • Diabetes mellitus — correction of hypothyroidism may worsen glycaemic control
  • Suspected thyroid gland autonomy — exogenous T3 effects are additive to endogenous production (FDA PI)
  • Pregnancy — do not discontinue; dose adjustment required. Levothyroxine is generally preferred in pregnancy
FDA Boxed Warning Not for Treatment of Obesity or Weight Loss

Thyroid hormones, including liothyronine, should not be used for the treatment of obesity or for weight loss. In euthyroid patients, doses within the range of daily hormonal requirements are ineffective for weight reduction. Larger doses may produce serious or even life-threatening manifestations of toxicity, particularly when given in combination with sympathomimetic amines such as those used for their anorectic effects.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Liothyronine replaces a thyroid hormone (T3) that your body normally produces. It is usually prescribed for specific situations where a rapid-acting thyroid hormone is needed, such as preparation for radioactive iodine treatment or when levothyroxine alone is not adequately controlling symptoms. In most cases, levothyroxine is the preferred long-term medication for hypothyroidism, and your prescriber will advise you on the appropriate duration of liothyronine use.

How to Take

Take liothyronine tablets by mouth once daily, or as directed by your prescriber (some patients may take it in divided doses). Liothyronine can be taken with or without food, though consistency in timing is recommended. Do not stop taking this medication without medical advice. If you are scheduled for radioactive iodine treatment, your prescriber will instruct you when to stop liothyronine to allow your TSH to rise.

Heart-Related Side Effects
Tell patientLiothyronine acts faster on the heart than other thyroid medications. You may notice a rapid or irregular heartbeat, chest discomfort, or shortness of breath, especially after starting the medication or when the dose is increased. These symptoms are particularly important for patients with a history of heart disease.
Call prescriberImmediately if you experience chest pain, a very fast or irregular heartbeat, shortness of breath, or if you feel unwell after a dose change.
Signs of Over- or Underdosing
Tell patientToo much: racing heart, sweating, trembling, weight loss, anxiety, difficulty sleeping. Too little: fatigue, weight gain, cold intolerance, constipation, dry skin. Report any persistent symptoms so the dose can be adjusted.
Call prescriberIf experiencing persistent symptoms of too much or too little thyroid hormone; never adjust the dose on your own.
Radioactive Iodine Preparation
Tell patientIf you are taking liothyronine as part of a thyroid cancer treatment plan, you will be asked to stop it 2 weeks before your radioactive iodine scan or treatment. During this time, you may experience temporary symptoms of hypothyroidism (fatigue, cold intolerance, constipation). These are expected and will resolve once treatment is complete and thyroid hormone is restarted.
Call prescriberIf symptoms become severe during the withdrawal period; if you are unsure about the timing of stopping and restarting the medication.
Other Medications
Tell patientInform your prescriber of all medications you take, especially blood thinners (warfarin), heart medications (digoxin), diabetes medications, and antidepressants. Thyroid hormone changes can affect how these medications work, and dose adjustments may be needed.
Call prescriberIf starting or stopping any medication while on liothyronine.
Storage
Tell patientStore tablets at room temperature, 15–30 °C (59–86 °F). Keep in the original container. Protect from light and moisture. Keep out of reach of children.
Call prescriberIf tablets appear discoloured or damaged; if accidental ingestion by a child occurs, seek emergency medical attention.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Pfizer Inc. Cytomel (liothyronine sodium) tablets — Full Prescribing Information. Revised 2018. FDA Label: CytomelPrimary US prescribing reference for oral liothyronine; source for dosing by clinical scenario, PK parameters, and contraindications.
  2. XGen Pharmaceuticals DJB, Inc. Liothyronine Sodium Injection — Prescribing Information. DailyMed: TriostatPI for IV liothyronine for myxedema coma/precoma; source for IV dosing, onset of action, and administration route restrictions.
  3. DailyMed. Cytomel — liothyronine sodium tablet. National Library of Medicine. DailyMed: CytomelNLM-hosted structured label used to cross-verify dosing, adverse effects, and drug interaction data.
Guidelines
  1. Jonklaas J, Bianco AC, Bauer AJ, et al. Guidelines for the treatment of hypothyroidism: prepared by the American Thyroid Association Task Force on Thyroid Hormone Replacement. Thyroid. 2014;24(12):1670–1751. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2014.0028Landmark ATA guideline establishing levothyroxine monotherapy as standard; provides evidence review on LT4/LT3 combination therapy and liothyronine monotherapy.
  2. Haugen BR, Alexander EK, Bible KC, et al. 2015 American Thyroid Association management guidelines for adult patients with thyroid nodules and differentiated thyroid cancer. Thyroid. 2016;26(1):1–133. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2015.0020ATA thyroid cancer guideline; includes protocols for thyroid hormone withdrawal using liothyronine before RAI therapy.
  3. Garber JR, Cobin RH, Gharib H, et al. Clinical practice guidelines for hypothyroidism in adults: cosponsored by the AACE and ATA. Endocr Pract. 2012;18(6):988–1028. https://doi.org/10.4158/EP12280.GLAACE/ATA consensus guideline on hypothyroidism; provides context for T3 use in clinical practice and discusses dose equivalence.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Nierenberg AA, Fava M, Trivedi MH, et al. A comparison of lithium and T3 augmentation following two failed medication treatments for depression: a STAR*D report. Am J Psychiatry. 2006;163(9):1519–1530. https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.2006.163.9.1519STAR*D Level 3 trial comparing liothyronine (T3) augmentation with lithium for treatment-resistant depression; supports T3 augmentation as a tolerable strategy.
  2. Wiersinga WM, Duntas L, Fadeyev V, Nygaard B, Vanderpump MPJ. 2012 ETA guidelines: the use of L-T4 + L-T3 in the treatment of hypothyroidism. Eur Thyroid J. 2012;1(2):55–71. https://doi.org/10.1159/000339444European Thyroid Association guideline reviewing evidence for LT4/LT3 combination therapy; provides recommendations on candidate selection and dosing ratios.
  3. Saravanan P, Chau WF, Roberts N, Vedhara K, Greenwood R, Dayan CM. Psychological well-being in patients on ‘adequate’ doses of L-thyroxine: results of a large, controlled community-based questionnaire study. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2002;57(5):577–585. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2265.2002.01654.xFoundational study documenting persistent symptoms in some levothyroxine-treated patients, prompting interest in T3-containing regimens.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Jonklaas J, Burman KD, Wang H, Latham KR. Single dose T3 administration: kinetics and effects on biochemical and physiological parameters. Thyroid. 2015;25(11):1209–1216. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2015.0318PK study documenting Tmax ~2.5 hours, half-life ~22 hours, and sustained TSH suppression beyond 24 hours after a single 50 mcg liothyronine dose.
  2. Celi FS, Zemskova M, Engel AD, et al. Pharmacokinetics of L-triiodothyronine in patients undergoing thyroid hormone therapy withdrawal. Thyroid. 2019;29(10):1475–1483. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2019.0101PK study in athyreotic patients; establishes two-compartment model with distribution t½ ~2.3 h and elimination t½ ~23 h; informs BID dosing strategies.
  3. Bianco AC, Salvatore D, Gereben B, Berry MJ, Larsen PR. Biochemistry, cellular and molecular biology, and physiological roles of the iodothyronine selenodeiodinases. Endocr Rev. 2002;23(1):38–89. https://doi.org/10.1210/edrv.23.1.0455Comprehensive review of deiodinase biology; explains why T3 from peripheral T4 conversion provides more stable levels than exogenous T3 administration.