Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association
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We report here the effectiveness of preoperative radioactive iodine-131 (131I) therapy for locally advanced thyroid cancer. A 57-year-old woman demonstrated a hard neck tumor that markedly invaded the surrounding organs. The cytological diagnosis of the tumor using fine-needle aspiration biopsy was papillary carcinoma. ⋯ The postoperative clinical course was uneventful. There have been no definitive reports using 131I as preoperative treatment for inoperable thyroid cancer. We suggest that 131I therapy may also be beneficial as neoadjuvant therapy for locally advanced thyroid carcinoma.
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Case Reports
Myopathy as the persistently isolated symptomatology of primary autoimmune hypothyroidism.
Although disorders of thyroid function may cause a wide range of muscle disturbances, an overt myopathy has been rarely reported as an isolated clinical presentation of hypothyroidism. We observed 10 patients (5 males and 5 females) who had been referred to the department of neurology because of muscular fatigability, myalgia, cramps, or proximal weakness. Laboratory investigation showed that all patients had hypothyroidism due to Hashimoto's thyroiditis (atrophic variant in 9/10). ⋯ Our observations suggest that an isolated myopathy as the sole manifestation of hypothyroidism is not a rare event. We postulate that our cases may constitute a peculiar subgroup of Hashimoto's thyroiditis patients: (1) the strikingly abnormal F/M ratio of 1:1; (2) the relatively younger age; (3) the rarity of the goitrous variant; (4) the unusual finding of antithyroglobulin (Tg-Ab) > antithyroid peroxidase (TPO-Ab). Thorough evaluation of thyroid function is appropriate in patients with myopathy of uncertain origin.
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The consequence of autoantigen presentation by thyroid cells is dependent on the magnitude of expression of both HLA class II antigens (mainly HLA-DR) and costimulatory molecules, such as B7 (CD80 and CD86). Autoimmune thyrocytes are induced to express HLA-DR by interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). The costimulatory signal leading to autoantibody production or cytotoxic T-cell immune response could be provided by antigen presenting cells (APCs) attracted to the thyroid by the primary autoimmune stimulus. ⋯ The absence of surface B7 molecules from the malignant thyroid cells may lead to either suppression of antitumoral cytotoxic T cell response or demand the cooperation of infiltrating APCs to favor immune response. Differences previously found in HLA-DR expression in the four human malignant thyroid cell lines may be explained by the variation in the binding of transcription factors to the boxes in the HLA-DRalpha promoter. The binding patterns of nuclear proteins derived from the four thyroid cell lines or from the B lymphocyte cell line--Raji--to each of the boxes or to the whole promoter exhibit similarities, thus suggesting similar DNA-protein interactions.
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An increase in the incidence of papillary thyroid cancer has been documented in individuals exposed to Chernobyl fallout in 1986. Experiments using cultured human cells have suggested that radiation can induce the ret/PTC1 rearrangement involving the ret proto-oncogene. To test the hypothesis that the ret/PTC1 rearrangement is involved in the pathogenesis of Chernobyl-associated papillary thyroid carcinomas, we studied a panel of 31 cases from Belarus. ⋯ Controls were positive in all 31 cases. Nine cases yielded a positive PCR product for the ret/PTC1 rearrangement (29%). Thus, the ret/PTC1 rearrangement is a feature of some Chernobyl-associated papillary thyroid cancers, and is one possible mechanism involved in the pathogenesis of these cancers.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of 18FDG-PET with 131iodine and 99mTc-sestamibi scintigraphy in differentiated thyroid cancer.
18Fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron-emission tomography (PET) has emerged as a useful method in various fields of oncology. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the clinical significance of this technique in differentiated thyroid carcinoma and to compare the results with other imaging modalities, particularly with whole-body 131iodine scintigraphy (WBS) and hexakis (2-methoxyisobutylisonitrile) (99m)technetium (I) scintigraphy (MIBI). Whole-body PET imaging using FDG was performed in 54 patients. ⋯ Nevertheless, since spatial resolution with respect to tomographic imaging is inferior with single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) using MIBI, the observed higher sensitivity of PET might be due to the higher spatial resolution of this method. As far as grading could be obtained, FDG-PET seemed to be more sensitive than WBS in high-grade tumors, whereas WBS was positive predominantly in low-grade carcinomas, although statistical significance could not be reached. The results prove the clinical usefulness of FDG-PET and MIBI for detection of 131iodine-negative tumor tissue in differentiated thyroid cancer.