I-131 SPECT/CT Elucidates Cryptic Findings on Planar Whole-Body Scans and Can Reduce Needless Therapy with I-131 in Post-Thyroidectomy Thyroid Cancer Patients

被引:35
作者
Blum, Manfred [2 ]
Tiu, Serafin [1 ]
Chu, Michael [2 ]
Goel, Sumina [1 ]
Friedman, Kent [1 ]
机构
[1] NYU Langone Med Ctr, Div Nucl Med, Dept Radiol, New York, NY 10016 USA
[2] NYU Langone Med Ctr, Dept Med, Div Endocrinol, New York, NY 10016 USA
关键词
POSITRON-EMISSION-TOMOGRAPHY; INCREMENTAL VALUE; RADIOIODINE THERAPY; COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY; CLINICAL-USEFULNESS; FDG-PET/CT; FOLLOW-UP; IMAGES; CT; CARCINOMA;
D O I
10.1089/thy.2011.0010
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Interpreting I-131 whole-body scans (WBSs) after thyroidectomy for thyroid cancer is not simple. There are scans in which interpretation is speculative because of cryptic findings (CF). Complexity is added in scans that are done a week after an ablative or therapeutic dose of I-131 because not only is I-131-labeled thyroxine (T4) distributed throughout the body, but inorganic I-131 that is derived from the de-iodination of T4 may be also detected. We present our observations regarding the analysis of CF on WBS using I-131 single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in fusion with noncontrast computed tomography (CT), referred to here and elsewhere as I-131 SPECT/CT. Methods: Forty of 184 WBSs in 38 thyroidectomized thyroid cancer patients were followed up with I-131 SPECT/CTs. The SPECT/CT images were acquired after a tracer dose of I-131 (n = 82) or a week after an ablative or therapeutic dose of I-131 (n = 102). Results: Among 184 WBSs, 40 (22%) had CF. In 35 patients the WBS was negative for metastatic disease except for the CF and 5 patients had evidence of thyroid cancer in addition to the CF. There were 49 CF in the planar scans that were localized by SPECT/CT. These were characterized as physiological uptake in gingiva, thymus, gall bladder, menstrual blood, uterine fibroid, recto-sigmoid, colon, and bladder. Also observed was uptake in sites that represented nonthyroidal pathology including dental abscess, hiatal hernia, renal cyst, and struma ovarii. SPECT/CT suggested that 10 of the CF were actually of thyroid origin. In 40 SPECT/CT scans, the images contributed to interpreting the scan. In 15 of 40 patients the SPECT/CT analysis of WBS was performed with tracer doses of I-131 and was important for determining whether to administer ablative I-131 treatment. In another 25 patients, in whom SPECT/CT was performed after ablative or therapeutic doses of 131-I, information regarding the characterization of CF by SPECT/CT was useful in determining if thyroid cancer metastases or thyroid remnants were present. Conclusions: I-131 SPECT/CT is a useful tool to characterize atypical or CF on WBS by differentiating thyroid remnant or cancer from physiologic activity or nonthyroid pathology. In the past, uptake on a WBS that was not explicable as physiologic activity was identified as putative or possible thyroid cancer and generally was treated with I-131. Now, by identifying activity in some possible cancer sites as not thyroid cancer, SPECT/CT can reduce inappropriate treatment with I-131. SPECT/CT of WBS performed after ablative doses of 131-I is useful in determining the nature of CF and therefore likely providing prognostic information.
引用
收藏
页码:1235 / 1247
页数:13
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]   Clinical Relevance of Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography/Computed Tomography of the Neck and Thorax in Postablation 131I Scintigraphy for Thyroid Cancer [J].
Aide, Nicolas ;
Heutte, Natacha ;
Rame, Jean-Pierre ;
Rousseau, Elise ;
Loiseau, Cedric ;
Henry-Amar, Michel ;
Bardet, Stephane .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, 2009, 94 (06) :2075-2084
[2]   FALSE-POSITIVE RADIOIODINE WHOLE-BODY SCAN IN THYROID-CANCER PATIENTS DUE TO UNRELATED PATHOLOGY [J].
BAKHEET, SM ;
HAMMAMI, MM .
CLINICAL NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 1994, 19 (04) :325-329
[3]  
Bakheet SM, 1997, J NUCL MED, V38, P984
[4]   False-positive radioiodine uptake in the abdomen and the pelvis: Radioiodine retention in the kidneys and review of the literature [J].
Bakheet, SMB ;
Hammami, MM ;
Powe, J .
CLINICAL NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 1996, 21 (12) :932-937
[5]  
Belhocine T., 2008, OPEN MED IMAGING J, V2, P80, DOI [10.2174/1874347100802010080, DOI 10.2174/1874347100802010080]
[7]   F-18 FDG-PET/CT Evaluation of Patients With Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Negative I-131 Total Body Scan and High Thyroglobulin Level [J].
Bertagna, Francesco ;
Bosio, Giovanni ;
Biasiotto, Giorgio ;
Rodella, Carlo ;
Puta, Erinda ;
Gabanelli, Sara ;
Lucchini, Silvia ;
Merli, Giuseppe ;
Savelli, Giordano ;
Giubbini, Raffaele ;
Rosenbaum, Joshua ;
Alavi, Abass .
CLINICAL NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2009, 34 (11) :756-761
[8]   Utility of Iodine-131 hybrid SPECT-CT fusion imaging before high-dose radioiodine therapy in papillary thyroid carcinoma [J].
Bhattacharya, Anish ;
Venkataramarao, Sunil Hejjaji ;
Bal, Chandra Sekhar ;
Mittal, Bhagwant Rai .
INDIAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2010, 25 (01) :29-31
[9]   Incremental Value of 131I SPECT/CT in the Management of Patients with Differentiated Thyroid Carcinoma [J].
Chen, Libo ;
Luo, Quanyong ;
Shen, Yan ;
Yu, Yongli ;
Yuan, Zhibin ;
Lu, Hankui ;
Zhu, Ruisen .
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2008, 49 (12) :1952-1957
[10]   Revised American Thyroid Association Management Guidelines for Patients with Thyroid Nodules and Differentiated Thyroid Cancer [J].
Cooper, David S. ;
Doherty, Gerard M. ;
Haugen, Bryan R. ;
Kloos, Richard T. ;
Lee, Stephanie L. ;
Mandel, Susan J. ;
Mazzaferri, Ernest L. ;
McIver, Bryan ;
Pacini, Furio ;
Schlumberger, Martin ;
Sherman, Steven I. ;
Steward, David L. ;
Tuttle, R. Michael .
THYROID, 2009, 19 (11) :1167-1214