| Literature DB >> 23193402 |
Marilee Carballo1, Roderick M Quiros.
Abstract
Radioactive iodine (RAI) is used in treatment of patients with differentiated papillary and follicular thyroid cancer. It is typically used after thyroidectomy, both as a means of imaging to detect residual thyroid tissue or metastatic disease, as well as a means of treatment by ablation if such tissue is found. In this paper, we discuss the indications for and the mechanisms of RAI in the treatment of patients with thyroid cancer. We discuss the attendant risks and benefits that come with its use, as well as techniques used to optimize its effectiveness as an imaging tool and a therapeutic modality.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23193402 PMCID: PMC3502018 DOI: 10.1155/2012/707156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Indications for RAI (adapted from NCCN 2012 guidelines).
| Recommended | |
|---|---|
| (i) All patients with gross extrathyroidal extension, primary tumor size > 4 cm, distant metastases | Papillary |
| (ii) For select patients without gross residual disease when the combination of clinical factors predicts an intermediate to-high-risk for recurrence or disease-specific mortality (e.g., primary tumors ranging from 1–4 cm confined to the thyroid, high-risk histologies, vascular invasion, or cervical lymph node metastases) | Papillary |
|
| |
| Not recommended | |
|
| |
| (i) Not routinely recommended for patients with either unifocal or multifocal papillary microcarcinomas (<1 cm) confined to the thyroid | Papillary |
| (ii) Not required: minimally invasive follicular thyroid carcinoma or Hurthle cell carcinoma confined to the thyroid when the primary tumor is small and demonstrates only invasion of the tumor capsule without vascular invasion | Follicular |
AJCC staging, 7th ed., for well-differentiated thyroid cancer based on TNM descriptors [2].
| T1 | Tumor diameter ≤ 2 cm, limited to the thyroid | |
| T2 | Primary tumor diameter > 2 cm to 4 cm, limited to the thyroid | |
| T3 | Primary tumor diameter > 4 cm, limited to the thyroid or with minimal extrathyroidal extension | |
| T4a | Tumor of any size extends beyond thyroid capsule to invade subcutaneous soft tissues, larynx, trachea, esophagus, or recurrent laryngeal nerve | |
| T4b | Tumor invades prevertebral fascia or encases carotid artery or mediastinal vessels | |
| TX | Primary tumor size unknown, but without extrathyroidal invasion | |
|
| ||
| N0 | No regional lymph node metastasis | |
| N1a | Metastasis to level VI (pretracheal, paratracheal, and prelaryngeal/Delphian lymph nodes) | |
| N1b | Metastasis to unilateral, bilateral, contralateral, cervical, or superior mediastinal lymph nodes | |
| NX | Nodes not assessed at surgery | |
|
| ||
| M0 | No distant metastases | |
| M1 | Distant metastases | |
| MX | Distant metastases not assessed | |
|
| ||
| Patient age < 45 years | Patient age ≥ 45 years | |
|
| ||
| Stage I | Any T, any N, M0 | T1, N0, M0 |
| Stage II | Any T, any N, M1 | T2, N0, M0 |
| Stage III | T3, N0, M0 | |
| T1, N1a, M0 | ||
| T2, N1a, M0 | ||
| T3, N1a, M0 | ||
| Stage IVA | T4a, N0, M0 | |
| T4a, N1a, M0 | ||
| T1, N1b, M0 | ||
| T2, N1b, M0 | ||
| T3, N1b, M0 | ||
| T4a, N1b, M0 | ||
| Stage IVB | T4b, Any N, M0 | |
| Stage IVC | Any T, Any N, M1 | |
Major factors impacting decision making in radioiodine remnant ablation, 2009 ATA guideline [2].
| Factors | Description | Expected Benefit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decreased risk of death | Decreased risk of recurrence | May facilitate initial staging and followup | RAI ablation usually recommended | Strength of evidence | ||
| T1 | ≤1 cm, intrathyroidal or microscopic multifocal | No | No | Yes | No | E |
| 1-2 cm, intrathyroidal | No | Conflicting data | Yes | Selective use | I | |
| T2 | >2–4 cm, intrathyroidal | No | Conflicting data | Yes | Selective use | C |
| T3 | >4 cm, | |||||
| <45 years | No | Conflicting data | Yes | Yes | B | |
| ≥45 years | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | B | |
| Any size, any age, minimal extrathyroidal extension | No | Inadequate data | Yes | Selective use | I | |
| T4 | Any size with gross extrathyroidal extension | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | B |
| NX, N0 | No metastatic nodes documented | No | No | Yes | No | I |
| N1 | <45 years | No | Conflicting data | Yes | Selective use | C |
| >45 years | Conflicting data | Conflicting data | Yes | Selective use | C | |
| M1 | Distant metastases present | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | A |
ATA risk of recurrence classification after initial surgery [2].
| Low risk |
|---|
| (i) No local or distant mets |
| (ii) All macroscopic tumor has been resected |
| (iii) There is no tumor invasion of locoregional tissues or structures |
| (iv) Tumor does not have aggressive histology (e.g., tall cell, insular, columnar cell carcinoma) or vascular invasion |
| (v) If I-131 is given, there is no I-131 uptake outside the thyroid bed on the first posttreatment whole-body RAI scan |
|
|
| Intermediate risk |
|
|
| (i) Microscopic invasion of tumor into the perithyroidal soft tissue at initial surgery |
| (ii) Cervical LN mets or I-131 uptake outside the thyroid bed on the post-treatment whole-body RAI scan done after thyroid |
| remnant ablation |
| (iii) Tumor with aggressive history or vascular invasion |
|
|
| High risk |
|
|
| (i) Macroscopic tumor invasion |
| (ii) Incomplete tumor resection |
| (iii) Distant mets |
| (iv) Possibly thyroglobulinemia out of proportion to what is seen on the post-treatment scan |
Criteria for distinguishing low-risk and high-risk well-differentiated carcinoma based on the AGES (age, grade, extrathyroid extent, and size) classification system.
| Low | High |
|---|---|
| Women < 50 years | Women ≥ 50 years |
| Men < 40 years | Men ≥ 40 years |
| Well-differentiated tumor | Poorly differentiated tumor (tall cell, columnar cell, or oxyphilic variants) |
| Tumor < 4 cm in diameter | Tumors ≥ 4 cm in diameter |
| Tumor confined to thyroid | Local invasion |
| No distant metastases | Distant metastases |
Figure 1Thyroid follicular cell.