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Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging · Apr 2010
Comparative StudyFive months' follow-up of patients with and without iodine-positive lymph node metastases of thyroid carcinoma as disclosed by (131)I-SPECT/CT at the first radioablation.
- Daniela Schmidt, Rainer Linke, Michael Uder, and Torsten Kuwert.
- Clinic of Nuclear Medicine, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Krankenhausstr. 12, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. Daniela.Schmidt@uk-erlangen.de
- Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging. 2010 Apr 1; 37 (4): 699-705.
PurposeIn differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC), (131)I-SPECT/CT is more accurate in identifying radioiodine-positive lymph node metastases (LNM) than planar whole-body scans (WBS). The purpose of this study was to investigate the value of (131)I-SPECT/CT performed at the first radioablation to predict the occurrence and/or persistence of cervical radioiodine-positive LNM 5 months later.MethodsThe study included 81 DTC patients that had had SPECT/ spiral CT after radioablation of thyroid remnants after thyroidectomy. The patients were re-examined 5 months later using (131)I-WBS performed at TSH stimulation. In addition, SPECT/CT of the neck was performed in patients with iodine-positive cervical foci to distinguish between thyroid remnant and LNM. The outcome variable of the study was the detection or exclusion of iodine-positive cervical LNM.ResultsOf 61 patients without a SPECT/CT diagnosis of (131)I-positive LNM at radioablation, 60 had no (131)I-positive LNM at follow-up. In the remaining patient of this group, a new radioiodine-positive LNM was detected. In 17 of 20 patients with a SPECT/CT diagnosis of (131)I-positive LNM (n = 19) or an indeterminate lesion (n = 1) at first radioablation, no (131)I-positive LNM were detected 5 months later. Radioiodine-positive LNM persisted in three patients of this group.Conclusion(131)I-SPECT/CT has a high negative predictive value with regard to the occurrence of radioiodine-positive cervical LNM 5 months after initial therapy. The majority of iodine-positive LNM diagnosed by SPECT/CT at radioablation disappear within 5 months. These findings motivate further research into the value of (131)I-SPECT/CT of the neck for predicting recurrence and planning surgical reintervention in DTC.
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