Pouwels M J, Hooymans P M, van der Aa G C, Gribnau F W
Department of Medicine, University Hospital St. Radboud, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
DICP. 1991 Oct;25(10):1043-6. doi: 10.1177/106002809102501001.
The bioavailability of digoxin in solution (Lanoxicaps, 90-100 percent) is superior to that of Lanoxin tablets (60-80 percent) in young healthy volunteers. The alleged bioequivalence of digoxin in tablets (Lanoxin 0.25, 0.125 mg) and capsules (Lanoxicaps 0.2, 0.1 mg) was studied in 20 elderly inpatients (14 women, 6 men, aged 84 +/- 5 years), treated with digoxin for atrial fibrillation. In a crossover design, steady-state digoxin concentrations were measured in 16 patients after once-daily administration of Lanoxin 0.125 mg or Lanoxicaps 0.1 mg, each for at least ten days. Four other patients took Lanoxin 0.25 mg and Lanoxicaps 0.2 mg successively. The steady-state digoxin concentrations were statistically significantly different, being 1.3 +/- 0.5 nmol/L for Lanoxin and 0.9 +/- 0.4 nmol/L for Lanoxicaps (p = 0.003). Whereas in young healthy volunteers the bioavailability of digoxin from Lanoxicaps (90-100 percent) exceeds that from Lanoxin (80 percent), in elderly patients the absorption appears to be similar. This suggests a lower than expected bioavailability of Lanoxicaps, which may result in subtherapeutic serum concentrations.