Influence of Diagnostic Radioiodines on the Uptake of Ablative Dose of Iodine-131

Autor: James W. Edmondson, Richard B. Schnute, Amita Manatunga, Orrin W. Perkins, Hee-Myung Park
Rok vydání: 1994
Předmět:
Zdroj: Thyroid. 4:49-54
ISSN: 1557-9077
1050-7256
DOI: 10.1089/thy.1994.4.49
Popis: The uptakes of thyroablative doses of 131I by postoperative thyroid remnants and/or thyroid carcinoma metastases following diagnostic surveys with 131I or 123I were retrospectively compared by visual inspection. Only those patients with a diagnostic scan demonstrating functioning tissue, remnant, and/or metastasis, following thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid carcinoma, were evaluated. The 131I survey group (n = 26) had received a diagnostic dose of 3 to 10 mCi of 131I. The 123I group (n = 14) had received the usual diagnostic dose of 300 microCi of 123I. The age, sex, and tumor type in the two groups were not statistically different. The uptake of the ensuing thyroablative dose of 131I appeared, by visual inspection, to be impaired in 20 of 26 patients in the 131I group and in none of the 14 patients in the 123I group (p < 0.00003). In the 131I group there was suggestion of a dose-response, that is, the higher the administered activity of 131I for the diagnostic scan, the more reduced was the subsequent apparent uptake of the thyroablative dose (p = 0.0007). Thyroid remnants or cervical lymph node metastases appeared to be affected more frequently than were the distant (pulmonary or skeletal) metastases (p = 0.004). This study suggests that iodine uptake function may be suppressed by the absorbed radiation from the 3 to 10 mCi "diagnostic" scanning dose of 131I. In this regard, 123I may be a better initial diagnostic agent to be used prior to radioablation therapy.
Databáze: OpenAIRE