[Diagnosis, radioiodine and radiotherapy of thyroid carcinomas]
1998
The long-term prognosis of differentiated thyroid carcinoma depends on early diagnosis and treatment of metastases and local recurrences and is modulated by several factors, age and histology being the most relevant. This article summarizes current trends in the use of radioactive iodine (131J) and gives explicit advice on its use in the treatment of these cancers. Complications of therapy are discussed in detail. We currently recommend that all patients undergoing a subtotal or total thyroidectomy are followed up by 131J thyroid scanning approximately 4 weeks after surgery. The combined use of three diagnostic modalities (measurement of serum thyroglobulin, neck ultrasonography with ultrasound-guided biopsy for detecting recurrences of carcinoma in the neck region and 131J whole-body scintigraphy) appears to give the best results in the follow up of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma. If any residual uptake is detected in the neck or if the tumor extends beyond the thyroid, we recommend routine thyroid ablation with 1,5-3 GBq of radioactive 131J. External radiotherapy is always indicated in papillary and folliculary carcinoma in the pT4 stage of pTNM classification but not in those in pT1-3 pN0 stage. In the presence of lymph-node metastases and distant metastases, an individual treatment concept is recommended regarding all risk factors, especially the age and sex of the patient, the histology and grading of the tumor and the completeness of tumor resection. Finally, radiotherapy is usually not indicated in medullary carcinoma, whereas it is always indicated in anaplastic carcinoma.
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