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- differentiated thyroid carcinoma (2) (entfernen)
Institut
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Nuklearmedizin (2) (entfernen)
Der Follow-UP von Patienten mit differenziertem Schilddrüsenkarzinom (DTC) wird konventionell mit I-131-Ganzkörperzintigrafie (GKS) und Bestimmung des Serumthyreoglobulins (hTg) durchgeführt. Wegen der Inzidenz von 15%-20% diskordanter Resultate entwickelte Bianchi et al. (J Nucl Med 1993; 34: 2032-2037) die Serumchromatografie von endogen radioiodiertem Triiodthyronin (L-T3) und Thyroxin (L-T4) bei Patienten mit DTC nach oraler Applikation von I-131. Da im Rahmen des Iodstoffwechsels auch radioiodierte Verbindungen im Urin erscheinen, versuchten wir eine Urinchromatografiemethode zu entwickeln, basierend auf der Annahme, dass ein pathologischer I-131-Uptake, wenngleich zu niedrig um im GKS erkannt zu werden, gleichwohl über endogen iodierte Schilddrüsenprodukte im Urin nachgewiesen werden kann. In der Urinchromatografie konnten die Ergebnisse der Serumchromatografie nicht erreicht werden.
Published studies on the risk of radiation-induced second primary malignancy (SPM) after radioiodine treatment (RAI) of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) refer mainly to patients treated as middle-aged or older adults and are not easily generalizable to those treated at a younger age. Here we review available literature on the risk of breast cancer as an SPM after RAI of DTC with a focus on females undergoing such treatment in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood. Additionally, we report the results of a preliminary international survey of patient registries from academic tertiary referral centers specializing in pediatric DTC. The survey sought to evaluate the availability of sufficient patient data for a potential international multicenter observational case–control study of females with DTC given RAI at an early age. Our literature review identified a bi-directional association of DTC and breast cancer. The general breast cancer risk in adult DTC survivors is low, ~2%, slightly higher in females than in males, but presumably lower, not higher, in those diagnosed as children or adolescents than in those diagnosed at older ages. RAI presumably does not substantially influence breast cancer risk after DTC. However, data from patients given RAI at young ages are sparse and insufficient to make definitive conclusions regarding age dependence of the risk of breast cancer as a SPM after RAI of DTC. The preliminary analysis of data from 10 thyroid cancer registries worldwide, including altogether 6,449 patients given RAI for DTC and 1,116 controls, i.e., patients not given RAI, did not show a significant increase of breast cancer incidence after RAI. However, the numbers of cases and controls were insufficient to draw statistically reliable conclusions, and the proportion of those receiving RAI at the earliest ages was too low.In conclusion, a potential international multicenter study of female patients undergoing RAI of DTC as children, adolescents, or young adults, with a sufficient sample size, is feasible. However, breast cancer screening of a larger cohort of DTC patients is not unproblematic for ethical reasons, due to the likely, at most slightly, increased risk of breast cancer post-RAI and the expected ~10% false-positivity rate which potentially produced substantial “misdiagnosis.”