Comparison between low and high radioactive iodine (131I) reablation dose in patients with papillary thyroid cancer

Autor: Shereen W. Yassin, Manal Al-Ezzi, Yasser Alsayed, Sherif El-Refaei, Khaled Salman, Maha Abd Elkareem Husseni, Tarek Al Munshy
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
Zdroj: Nuclear Medicine Communications. 36:114-119
ISSN: 0143-3636
DOI: 10.1097/mnm.0000000000000233
Popis: The aim of this study was to assess ablation outcome after a second ablation dose and compare the ablation rate after low and high reablation doses of iodine-131 ((131)I) after failure of the first ablation with 3700 MBq.The study included 81 patients with papillary thyroid cancer; they failed to achieve complete ablation after a first ablative dose of 3700 MBq. Their first follow-up (131)I whole-body scan carried out 6-9 months after ablation showed small residual functioning tissue in the thyroid bed, with no functioning metastases. This is associated with unsuppressed serum thyroglobulin level (Tg) higher than 2 ng/ml. The patients received a second ablation dose, which was low (1110 MBq) in 37 patients and high in the remaining 44 patients (2960 MBq in 36 patients and 3700 MBq in eight patients). A whole-body scan and Tg level assessment were carried out 6-9 months later. The criteria for complete ablation included absence of residual functioning thyroid tissue and a Tg level lower than 2 ng/ml.The overall successful complete ablation rate after the second reablation dose was 75%. This was achieved in 27 of 37 patients (73%) who received a low reablation dose and in 34 of 44 patients (77%) who received a high reablation dose; no statistically significant difference was found between the two groups (P0.05).In patients with papillary thyroid cancer who failed to achieve complete ablation after the first ablation dose of 3700 MBq, the overall complete ablation rate after both a low and a high second (131)I dose was 75%, with no statistically significant difference in ablation rate between low (1110 MBq) and high (2960 and 3700 MBq) doses (73 and 77%, respectively).
Databáze: OpenAIRE