| Literature DB >> 27504020 |
Marek M Chojnowski1, Anna Felis-Giemza2, Małgorzata Kobylecka1.
Abstract
Radionuclide synovectomy is a minimally invasive method of treating persistent joint inflammation. It involves intra-articular injection of radioactive colloids which induce necrosis and fibrosis of hypertrophic synovial membrane. The most common indication for radiosynovectomy is rheumatoid arthritis, although patients with seronegative spondyloarthropathies, unclassified arthritis, haemophilic arthropathy and other less common arthropathies can also benefit from this method. Radiosynovectomy is safe, well tolerated and efficacious. About 70-80% of patients respond well to the therapy. However, the therapeutic effects are considerably worse in patients with co-existent osteoarthritis and advanced joint degeneration. Despite its advantages, radionuclide synovectomy is not performed as often as it could be, so greater knowledge and understanding of this method are needed. The authors present the most important facts about radiosynovectomy that may help rheumatologists in their daily clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: hypertrophic-exudative synovitis; radiosynovectomy; rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27504020 PMCID: PMC4967977 DOI: 10.5114/reum.2016.61210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reumatologia ISSN: 0034-6233
Contraindications for radiosynovectomy [11]
| Pregnancy and breast-feeding (although radiocolloid leakage to bloodstream and systemic irradiation is minimal, in pregnant and breast-feeding women potential radiation side effects definitely outweigh the benefits) |
| Local skin infection, septic arthritis |
| Ruptured popliteal cyst, penetrating joint injuries, recent joint surgery (less than six weeks before RS) |
| Severe bleeding disorder (RS in haemophilic patients has to be performed following intravenous infusion of deficient clotting factor) |
| End-stage osteoarthritis, severe cartilage loss, joint instability due to bone destruction |
| Popliteal cyst with valve mechanism |
| Recent intra-articular injection (less than 2 weeks before RS) |
| Age below 20 years (in haemophilic children the benefits of RS clearly outweigh the hazards; in children with JIA, however, each case requires special consideration, since the long-term effect of radiation on the growing epiphyseal plate is not known) |
Fig. 1Extensive synovial hypertrophy (arrows) in course of JIA in the suprapatellar recess of the knee joint. Ultrasound, longitudinal cross-section.
Fig. 2Active inflammation of wrists and metacarpophalangeal joints in a patient with RA. Three phase bone scintigraphy with 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate.
Fig. 3RS of the elbow joint under fluoroscopic guidance. Contrast medium is injected before the actual radiopharmaceutical (tip of the needle is visible in the humeroradial joint).
Fig. 4PET/CT with 90Y after knee RS. Coronal (A) and sagittal (B) cross-sections show diffuse distribution of the radiopharmaceutical in the joint, without any extra-articular leakage.
Radionuclides used in radiosynovectomy
| Parameter | Yttrium-90 | Rhenium-186 | Erbium-169 |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1/2 (days) | 2.7 | 3.7 | 9.5 |
| Energy (MeV) | 2.26 | 0.98 | 0.34 |
| Tissue | |||
| Joints | knee | shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, ankle | small joints of hands and feet |