[131I]metaiodobenzylguanidine in neuroblastoma patients at diagnosis.
1991
: Treatment of resistant neuroblastoma with high dosage [131I]metaiodobenzylguanidine (131I-MIBG) appears effective since encouraging results have been obtained so far even in patients with very advanced, intensively pre-treated disease. We have already reported a stage III NB patient treated at diagnosis, who is at present in complete remission with a 4-year follow-up. To further explore the potential role of this new drug in untreated patients, we administered radionuclide to two children with stage III neuroblastoma. Both cases received 131I-MIBG at relatively low doses, and showed a significant reduction of the tumor mass and, interestingly enough, no evidence of 131I-MIBG uptake of a tracer dose in the remaining tumor. Particularly in case 1, the permanence and subsequent progression of the part of the tumor mass without 131I-MIBG uptake, after therapeutic doses of 131I-MIBG which apparently destroyed the 131I-MIBG-positive cell population, clearly suggest heterogeneity at diagnosis, with a dual neuroblastoma cell population, one with 131I-MIBG uptake and the other without. Aside from the biological implications of the heterogeneous MIBG uptake in neuroblastoma at diagnosis, our findings suggest that in stage III neuroblastoma patients even a relatively small dose of 131I-MIBG administered at diagnosis is sufficient to either completely destroy the primary tumor, as reported by our group, or to destroy that part of the tumor which shows 131I-MIBG uptake (as in the present cases), without any significant hematologic toxicity. Furthermore, a single course of 131I-MIBG at the dosage employed here does not appear to jeopardize the subsequent use of chemotherapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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