ASSESSMENT OF TREATMENT RESPONSE TO 131I THERAPY FOR PATIENTS WITH DIFFERENTIATED THYROID CARCINOMA IN THE PAST THREE YEARS (Single Institutional Experience)

Document Type : Original Paper, Therapy

Authors

1 clinical oncology and nuclear medicine- faculty of medicine- Cairo university

2 Oncology and Nuclear Medicine Department, Kasr Al-Aini Hospital, Cairo University, Egypt.

3 clinical oncology and nuclear medicine department, faculty of medicine, Cairo university

4 Department of Nuclear Medicine, Faculty of Medicine , Cairo University

Abstract

ABSTRACT;
Background; The most frequent endocrine cancer is thyroid cancer. Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) is becoming more common lately. Aim of the work; The objective of this study is to assess the response to radioactive iodine 131 (RAI131) treatment outcome in the institution over the last three years. Methods; Retrospective analysis of data of 223 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma between years of 2017 and 2019 at the Nuclear Medicine Unit, Cairo University Hospitals (NEMROCK). Data collection included operative extent, pathology, 131I dose, diagnostic and post-therapeutic radioactive iodine scan and neck ultrasound. Results; Among the 223 patients, 61.9% were ≤45 years, most of them were females (male: female ratio of 1: 2.23). Papillary thyroid carcinoma was the most frequent pathology with incidence 66.8%. There was statistically insignificant difference between low and high doses of iodine in achieving successful residual ablation in low as well as intermediate risk patients. Multivariant analysis of the different risk factors revealed that proper ablative dose, gender, serial serum thyroglobulin measurement, risk stratification were significant prognostic factors. Conclusion; Our data suggest that proper ablative dose, gender, serial serum thyroglobulin measurement, lack of metastatic lesions and risk stratification were significant prognostic predictors for excellent outcome in DTC patients.

Keywords