Brain metastasis from differentiated thyroid cancer in patients treated with radioiodine for bone and lung lesions

2000 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Misaki ◽  
Masahiro Iwata ◽  
Kanji Kasagi ◽  
Junji Konishi
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tong Wu ◽  
Zan Jiao ◽  
Yixuan Li ◽  
Jin Peng ◽  
Fan Yao ◽  
...  

BackgroundBrain metastasis from differentiated thyroid cancer has followed a similar increasing trend to that of thyroid cancer in recent years. However, the characteristics and treatments for brain metastases are unclear. The aim of this study was to understand this disease by analyzing patients with brain metastases from differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC).MethodsBetween 2000 and 2020, the database of the Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center was searched for differentiated thyroid cancer patients. We identified a cohort of 22 patients with brain metastases. The characteristics of the patients, histological features, treatments, and time of death were reviewed. The overall survival (OS) rate was calculated using the Kaplan Meier method. Survival curves of different subgroups were compared according to baseline characteristics and treatments received.ResultsA total of 22 (1.09%) out of 2013 DTC patients in the Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center database were identified as having brain metastases. The overall median survival time was 17.5 months (range from 1–60 months) after diagnosis of brain metastasis. Performance statue (PS), tumor site, and neurosurgery impacted survival, according to Kaplan-Meier analysis. Prognosis of skull metastasis was superior to that of intracranial types. Neurosurgery was the only type of treatment that had an impact on patient OS.ConclusionsBrain metastasis from differentiated thyroid cancer has a poor prognosis. However, it can be improved by comprehensive treatment. PS of the patients can greatly affect survival. Skull metastases have improved prognosis over intracranial types. Radioiodine therapy (RAIT) appears to effectively improve the prognosis of patients with skull metastases from DTC.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noriko Takata ◽  
Yasushi Hamamoto ◽  
Masao Miyagawa ◽  
Kenji Makita ◽  
Hirofumi Ishikawa ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Brain metastases from differentiated thyroid cancer are uncommon, and the prognosis of patients with them is poor. To explore the optimal treatment for this entity, we retrospectively investigated incidence and features of brain metastases from differentiated thyroid cancer that appeared during and after radioactive iodine therapy. Methods Between 2002 and 2012, 89 patients of differentiated thyroid cancer were included (median age, 63-years; male/female = 29/60). The median follow-up time from first ablation was 63 months (range: 1–175 months). The median cumulative radioactive iodine dose was 8.51 GBq (range: 1.11–42.55 GBq). Results During the follow-up, brain metastases occurred in four (4.5 %) patients. The median follow-up time after first ablation of four patients was 69 months (22, 63, 76 and 105 months). They had already had extracranial metastases at first ablation (lung metastases: 3, lung and bone metastases: 1), and had one or more lesions resistant to radioactive iodine therapy at diagnosis of brain metastasis. Three of them had experienced major hemorrhage from brain metastasis. Survival time intervals from the diagnosis to brain metastasis were 2.5, 3.6, 13 and 13.1 months. Conclusion Brain metastases of differentiated thyroid cancer were relatively uncommon. Prognosis of patients with brain metastasis was unfavorable because of frequent major brain hemorrhage and frequent existence of concomitant extracranial lesions resistant to radioactive iodine therapy. To prevent intracranial hemorrhage, early treatment seemed to be necessary for brain metastases from differentiated thyroid cancer.


Author(s):  
Robert J. Amdur ◽  
Illona M. Schmallfuss ◽  
Ernest L. Mazzaferri

1979 ◽  
Vol 18 (02) ◽  
pp. 86-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Zamrazil ◽  
D. Pohunková ◽  
S. Röhling ◽  
J. Němec

Pulmonary metastases were found in 123 out of 840 patients with thyroid cancer between 1955-1977. 87 patients with pulmonary metastases of differentiated cancer were studied in detail, including an evaluation of prognostically important factors. In 66 of them, the induction of 131I uptake in metastases was attempted, in half of them successfully. Uptake was achieved more frequently in younger subjects, in papillary cancers and in patients with fine pulmonary metastases on chest films. Survival (not corrected for age) was evaluated 10 and 15 years following the diagnosis of thyroid cancer and was found to be 29,1 % and 12,2%, respectively. Significantly higher survival rates were seen in younger patients, in patients with the fine type of pulmonary metastases, in the absence of bone metastases and, particularly, in patients with induced 131I uptake in metastases. Papillary cancers were found to have higher survival rates in males and in young subjects only, in the whole group the survival rates were independent of either microscopic type or sex. It is believed that biologic behaviour of distant (pulmonary) metastases may be influenced by radioiodide therapy.


2005 ◽  
Vol 44 (05) ◽  
pp. 185-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Wieler ◽  
S. Birtel ◽  
E. Ostwald-Lenz ◽  
K. P. Kaiser ◽  
H. P. Becker ◽  
...  

Summary:Aim: For the surgical therapy of differentiated thyroid cancer precise guidelines are applied by the German medical societies. In a retrospective multicenter study, we investigated the following issues: Are the current guidelines respected?. Is there a difference concerning the surgical radicalism and the outcome?. Does the perioperative morbidity increase with the higher radicalism of the procedure?. Patients, methods: Data gained from 102 patients from 17 regional referral hospitals who underwent surgery for thyroid cancer and a following radioiodine treatment (mean follow up: 42.7 [24-79] months) were analyzed. At least 71 criterias were analyzed in a SPSS file. Results: 46.1% of carcinomas were incidentally detected during goiter surgery. The thyroid cancer (papillary n = 78; follicular n = 24) occurred in 87% unilateral and in 13% bilateral. Papillary carcinomas <1 cm were detected in 25 cases; in five of these cases (20%) contralateral carcinomas <1 cm were found. There were significant differences concerning the surgical radicalism: a range from hemithyroidectomy to radical thyroidectomy with lateral neck dissection. Analysis of the histopathologic reports revealed that lymph node dissection was not performed according to guidelines in 55% of all patients. The perioperative morbidity was lower in departments with a high case load. The postoperative dysfunction of the recurrent laryngeal nerve (mean: 7.9% total / 4.9% nerves at risk) variated highly, depending on differences in radicalism and hospitals. Up to now these variations in surgical treatment have shown no differences in their outcome and survival rates, when followed by radioiodine therapy. Conclusion: Current surgical regimes did not follow the guidelines in more than 50% of all cases. This low acceptance has to be discussed. The actual discussion about principles of treatment regarding, the socalled papillary microcarcinomas (old term) has to be respected within the current guidelines.


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