Pretherapeutic dosimetry before 131I therapy of benign thyroid disease

2015 ◽  
Vol 54 (03) ◽  
pp. 131-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. F. Behrendt ◽  
A. Heinzel ◽  
B. Müller ◽  
F. M. Mottaghy ◽  
F. A. Verburg ◽  
...  

SummaryAim: To compare uptake measurements and different methods for the pretherapeutic determination of the effective thyroidal 131I half life (Teff) to the results of posttherapeutic dosimetric measurements. Patients, methods: Retrospective study of 1538 patients who received their first RIT in our department for autonomous thyroid nodules (ATN), autonomous multinodular goiter (AMG) or Graves' disease (GD) between November 1999 and January 2011. Pretherapeutic measurements were performed at any combination of 24 h, 48 h and 6 days after 131I administration. Post-therapy dosimetric measurements were performed in 12 h intervals until discharge. Teff was determined through monoexponential curve fitting. Results: Pretherapeutic Teff values based on measurements at 24 h and 48 h, 24 h and 6 d, 48 h and 6 d as well as on day 24 h, 48 h and 6 d yielded implausible (< 2 d or > 8 d) values for Teff, in 60.4%, 25.7%, 29.1 and 21.4% of available calculations, respectively. The plausible results showed significant, clinically relevant and sometimes considerable overestimations of Teff. Using empirically determined fixed disease specific Teff values resulted in a better congruence between the pre- and posttherapeutic dosimetry results. 24 h measurements were marginally more accurate than 48 h ones in AMG and GD whereas 48 h measurements were marginally more accurate in ATN; these differences are however not clinically relevant. 6 d measurements are clearly less accurate than those after 24 h or 48 h. Conclusion: In ATN, AMG and GD, pretherapeutic dosimetry can be performed by a single uptake measurement at 24 h or 48 h using a fixed, disease specific value for Teff. Additional later measurements do not yield a further clinically relevant contribution to accuracy of pretherapeutic dosimetry.

2006 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 554-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng-Yu Chiang ◽  
Jen-Chih Lin ◽  
Che-Wei Wu ◽  
Ka-Wo Lee ◽  
Shang-Pin Lu ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (03) ◽  
pp. 71-76
Author(s):  
R. Bares ◽  
U. Büll ◽  
B. Müller

In order to compute effective half-life of131I after application of therapeutic doses (Teff), the time course of whole-body radioactivity was evaluated retrospectively in 115 patients with benign thyroid diseases (multinodular autonomous adenoma, solitary autonomous adenoma or Graves’ disease). Because of a large overlap of Teff in the various diseases analyzed, courses of all patients who did (group Ts, 24 cases) or did not (group kTs, 91 cases) receive antithyroid drugs during therapy were summarized. In group Ts a mean Teff of 5.0 ± 0.9 d was found which was significantly (p <0.01) lower than the mean Teff of 6.3 ± 0.9 d in group kTs. We believe that the mean Teff is a practical alternative in radioiodine dosimetry if an exact determination of Teff cannot be performed because of shortage of time.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Negro

To determine an optimal time for follow-up of benign thyroid nodules, we retrospectively evaluated 249 euthyroid patients with uni-multinodular goiter, who underwent annual visit, and significant events that occurred in 5 years’ time were registered. A significant event (appearance of new nodule, increase of nodule diameter >50%, appearance of compressive symptoms, thyroidectomy, repetition of FNA on the same nodule, and execution of FNA on new nodule) occurred in 26.1% of patients, with more than one event occurring in the same patient in 27.7% of cases. The majority of events (71.9%) were observed at 24- and 36-month follow-up visit. These results suggest that a patient diagnosed with benign nodular goiter may be safely followed-up at a 2-3-year interval time.


2000 ◽  
Vol 39 (04) ◽  
pp. 108-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Urbannek ◽  
M. Schmidt ◽  
D. Moka ◽  
H. W. Hillger ◽  
E. Voth ◽  
...  

Summary Aim: We investigated whether additional application of “cold” iodine after therapy with radioiodine could result in a prolongation of the effective half life of iodine-131 and would thus lead to an increase of the effective thyroid radiation dose. Methods: Time-activitycurves after therapy with radioiodine were analysed in 25 patients (16 women, 9 men). Nine patients suffered from autonomously functioning thyroid nodules, 5 from autonomous multinodular goiter and 11 from Graves’ disease. These patients had an effective half life shorter than 4 days resulting in an undertreatment of > 20% with respect to the desired effective thyroid radiation dose. 2-4 days after therapy with radioiodine all patients received “cold” iodine for three days in a dose of 3 × 200 μg per day. Results: In 14 of the 25 patients an increase of the effective half life was observed. Patients with an autonomously functioning thyroid nodule showed a mean increase of the effective thyroid radiation dose of 40 ± 44 Gy, patients with toxic multinodular goiter of 29 ± 30 Gy and patients with Graves’ disease of 37 ± 37 Gy. Conclusion: Additional application of “cold” iodine after therapy with radioiodine can prolong the effective half life in selected patients. We suspect a correlation with the thyroid iodine pool. This will be the basis for further investigations hopefully resulting in a better patient preselection to determine who might respond to this therapy.


2004 ◽  
Vol 43 (06) ◽  
pp. 217-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Dressler ◽  
F. Grünwald ◽  
B. Leisner ◽  
E. Moser ◽  
Chr. Reiners ◽  
...  

SummaryThe version 3 of the guideline for radioiodine therapy for benign thyroid diseases presents first of all a revision of the version 2. The chapter indication for radioiodine therapy, surgical treatment or antithyroid drugs bases on an interdisciplinary consensus. The manifold criteria for decision making consider the entity of thyroid disease (autonomy, Graves’ disease, goitre, goitre recurrence), the thyroid volume, suspicion of malignancy, cystic nodules, risk of surgery and co-morbidity, history of subtotal thyroidectomy, persistent or recurrent thyrotoxicosis caused by Graves’ disease including known risk factors for relapse, compression of the trachea caused by goitre, requirement of direct therapeutic effect as well as the patient’s preference. Because often some of these criteria are relevant, the guideline offers the necessary flexibility for individual decisions. Further topics are patients’ preparation, counseling, dosage concepts, procedural details, results, side effects and follow-up care. The prophylactic use of glucocorticoids during radioiodine therapy in patients without preexisting ophthalmopathy as well as dosage and duration of glucocorticoid medication in patients with preexisting ophthalmopathy need to be clarified in further studies. The pragmatic recommendations for the combined use of radioiodine and glucocorticoids remained unchanged in the 3rd version.


Author(s):  
Teresa Jimenez ◽  
Pablo Vidal-Rios ◽  
Antonio Rodriguez ◽  
Laura Villas ◽  
Sebastian Vidal-Rios

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raul Rodriguez Escobedo ◽  
Silvia Gonzalez Martinez ◽  
Fernando Garcia Urruzola ◽  
Soraya Lanes Iglesias ◽  
Alicia Martin Nieto ◽  
...  

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