Oral Exam - Therapy Flashcards
Empiric dosing for thyroid cancer
○ Low risk, post thyroidectomy: 50-100 mCi
○ Intermediate/highrisk,postthyroidectomy: 100-150 mCi
○ Lymphadenopathy: 125-175 mCi
○ Recurrent/residualdisease: 150-200mCi
○ Bonemetastases: 200mCi
○ Lungmetastases: 200mCi,keepingtotaldose
to lung < 80 mCi
I131 for cancer therapy indications
- I-131 therapy decreases risk of death
- I-131 therapy decreases risk of recurrence
• I-131 therapy facilitates initial staging and follow-up
○ All patients with thyroid cancer
○ Generally administered within 6 months post
thyroidectomy
○ Serumt . hyroglobulin levels should be ≤ 2ng/mLif
ablation successful
○ Recurrence suspected if thyroglobulin levels rise over
time, particularly if > 10 ng/mL
– Thyroglobulin not specific for thyroid cancer,
however; it is made by normal thyroid tissue as well
○ If thyroglobulin > 10ng/mL and whole-body RAI scan
negative, consider F-18 FDG PET/CT
I131 Patient Prep
○ Confirm no recent iodine load
– Wai t4-6 weeks after IV contrast to begin RAI scan and therapy
– Amiodarone
– Highdietaryiodine(e.g.,seakelpsupplements)
○ Most experts recommend low-iodine diet 1-2 weeks
prior to whole-body scan and therapy
○ ElevateTSHpriortowhole-bodyscanandRAItherapy
– Levothyroxine(Synthroid)withdrawalfor3weeksin
adults, 2 weeks in children
– Stimulation with human recombinant TSH (Thyrogen)
□ 3-dayprotocol (IM injection on days 1 and 2, day 3 scan and RAI therapy)
□ More expensive than withdrawal
• Pre-therapy RAI whole-body scan
○ Useful to evaluate for nodal, distant metastases, confirm RAI-avid disease in recurrence (> 1 cm), determine dose of I-131 therapy
○ Can use I-123 or I-131 for whole-body scan; however, I- 123 has better imaging characteristics than I-131
• Post-therapy whole body scan
○ 4-10 days following RAI therapy
Side effects I131
• Nausea • Sore throat • Salivary gland complications ○ Sialadenitis, xerostomia, salivary calculi • Change in sense of taste • Radiation thyroiditis - Radiation lung fibrosis - Bone marrow supression - Secondary malignancies
I131 doses for Graves
○ Typically 15-20 mCi I-131 po
I131 dose for toxic nodular disease
○ 20-30 mCi I-131po, sometimes 40 mCi
Alternative treatments for hyperthyroidism
Surgical (if large TMNG)
Methimazole (used most commonly, hepatic toxicity/blood dyscrasias, once daily dosing)
PTU (Hepatic toxicity/blood dyscrasias, used during 1st trimester pregnancy)
Radiation safety release requirements
I131 dose < 33 mCi = released to outpatient setting with written radiation safety precautions
I131 dose > 33 mCi = can be released with written safety precautions and estimated dose to bystanders < 5 mSv
I131 for hyperthyroidism - complications
Thyroid storm Radiation thyroiditis (often requires steroids) Opthalmopathy complications - do steroid taper
Lymphoma therapy
For relapsed or refractory low grade or follicular B cell lymphoma
Anti-CD20 targeted radiotherapy
In111-zevalin given first for biodistrubution
Y90-zevalin - cold rituximab given before; promotes better binding to tumour
Hepatic metastases therapy
Yyttrium 90 radioembolization; pure beta; t1/2 64 hrs
Hepatic radioembolization - contraindications
Disseminated extrahepatic metastases, liver failure, excessive lung shunt fraction on Tc-99m MAA scan, unavoidable extrahepatic perfusion
Hepatic radioembolization - procedure
Tc-99m MAA embolization scan
○ Calculate lung shunt fraction (adjust dose for shunting), detect extrahepatic perfusion, calculate Yttrium-90 dose
○ Intra-arterial injection of 3-5 mCi Tc-99m MAA
- if shunt fraction less than 10%, no dose modifications needed
Tc-99m MAA imaging
○ Anterior/posterior static images of thorax/abdomen
○ SPECT or SPECT/CT images of upper abdomen
○ SPECT/CT of upper abdomen strongly recommended
– Confirm hepatic segment sembolized with MAA
correspond with malignancy
– Detect evidence of extrahepatic perfusion; common
sites include stomach, gallbladder, peripancreatic, 2nd
portion of duodenum and periumbilical
– Free pertechnetate can create false-positive mimic of
extrahepatic gastric perfusion
□ If thyroid activity is also present, then etiology is
free pertechnetate
□ Focal gastric uptake favors extrahepatic perfusion,
whereas free pertechnetate more likely involves
entire stomach
Hepatic radioembolization - complications
○ Progressive pulmonary insufficiency secondary to
radiation pneumonitis: Very rare but fatal complication
○ Radiation pneumonitis occurs with > 30 Gy in a single
treatment, 50 Gy cumulative
• Delayed complication(s)
○ Cholecystitis: Microspheres through patent cystic artery
– Usually self-limited, rarely requires cholecystectomy
– Avoid by infusing distal to cystic artery origin, empiric
coil embolization
○ Gastritis, duodenitis, pancreatitis or esophagitis: Inadvertent intestinal microsphere deposition
Radium benefits
○ 1st radiopharmaceutical therapy that extends survival in
patients with bone metastasis
○ 3.6 month median survival advantage compared to
placebo