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Effects of therapeutic doses of 131 I in thyroid papillary carcinoma patients with elevated thyroglobulin level and negative 131 I whole‐body scan: comparative study
Author(s) -
Koh JungMin,
Kim Eun Sook,
Ryu Jin Sook,
Hong Suck Joon,
Kim Won Bae,
Shong Young Kee
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
clinical endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1365-2265
pISSN - 0300-0664
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2265.2003.01733.x
Subject(s) - thyroglobulin , medicine , thyroid carcinoma , endocrinology , thyroid cancer , thyroidectomy , thyroid , therapeutic effect , gastroenterology
Summary objective Previous studies have shown a high rate of visualization of uptake and a decrease in serum thyroglobulin (Tg) after therapeutic doses of 131 I in well‐differentiated thyroid cancer patients with elevated thyroglobulinaemia but negative diagnostic 131 I whole‐body scan (DxWBS), but its therapeutic effect remains controversial. We evaluate the effect of therapeutic doses of 131 I in patients with elevated thyroglobulin level but negative DxWBS. design Among papillary thyroid carcinoma patients who underwent total or near‐total thyroidectomy and remnant ablation with radioiodine during 1996 to 2000 in our hospital, the patients who showed elevated serum Tg levels and no abnormal uptake in DxWBS were selected. The selection for treatment or no treatment was decided according to the preference of the patients, considering side‐effects of therapeutic doses of 131 I, and the patients were thereafter studied retrospectively. patients Sixty papillary thyroid carcinoma patients with elevated thyroglobulinaemia but negative DxWBS were included. Twenty‐eight patients were treated, and 32 were untreated. measurements We compared serum Tg levels measured at less than 3 months before the administration of therapeutic doses of 131 I or DxWBS with the levels at 6–12 months after administration between two groups. Comparable data on changes in serum Tg levels during TSH suppression (Tg‐on) and those in hypothyroid phase (Tg‐off) were available in 25 and 49 patients, respectively. results Percentage decreases in both Tg‐on and Tg‐off levels of the treated group [41·2 (10·1–94·1)% and 37·0 (−176·6–88·4)%, respectively] were significantly higher than those of the untreated group [−43·6 (−180·1–7·3)% and −66·6 (−10644·2–39·1)%, respectively] ( P < 0·001). The treated patients were followed‐up for 23·8 ± 19·6 months after the administration of therapeutic doses of 131 I. In four cases, serum Tg levels converted to negative (< 1·0 ng/ml) both on and off T4 15–22 months after the administration of therapeutic doses of 131 I, and negative serum Tg levels persisted for 24–70 months. However, negative conversion of elevated serum Tg levels was not observed in any of the untreated group. Post‐treatment WBS revealed pathologic uptake in 12 of 28 cases (42·9%). conclusions This study revealed that the administration of therapeutic doses of 131 I has a therapeutic effect, at least for palliation in short‐term observation, considering the serum Tg level as an index of tumour burden, and that it can disclose previously undiagnosed lesion in some patients with differentiated thyroid cancer who show elevated thyroglobulin level but negative diagnostic 131 I whole‐body scan.