Abstract

During thyroid tumor progression, cellular de-differentiation may occur and it is commonly accompanied by metastatic spread and loss of iodine uptake. Retinoic acid (RA) administration might increase iodine uptake in about 40% of patients, suggesting that RA could be a promising therapeutic option for radioiodine non-responsive thyroid carcinoma, although a prospective study with a long-term follow-up has not been reported. This was a clinical prospective study assessing the value of 13-cis-RA in patients with advanced thyroid carcinoma and its impact on major outcomes such as tumor regression and cancer-related death with a long-term follow-up of patients submitted to radioiodine (¹³¹I) therapy after RA administration. Sixteen patients with inoperable disease and no significant radioiodine uptake on post-therapy scan were selected. Patients were treated orally with 13-cis-RA at a dose of 1.0 to 1.5 mg·kg⁻¹·day⁻¹ for 5 weeks and then submitted to radioiodine therapy (150 mCi) after thyroxine withdrawal. A whole body scan was obtained 5 to 7 days after the radioactive iodine therapy. RECIST criteria were used to evaluate the response. An objective partial response rate was observed in 18.8%, a stable disease rate in 25% and a progression disease rate in 56.2%. Five patients died (62.5%) in the group classified as progression of disease. Progression-free survival rate (PFS) ranged from 72 to 12 months, with a median PFS of 26.5 months. RA may be an option for advanced de-differentiated thyroid cancer, due to the low rate of side effects.

Highlights

  • Differentiated thyroid carcinomas are slow growing and usually curable by the combination of surgery, radioiodine ablation and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppressive therapy

  • The baseline characteristics of the patients enrolled in the study are listed in Table 1; 3 patients (18.8%) had received prior chemotherapy and 5 (31.3%) prior external-beam radiation

  • There are no effective therapies for advanced metastatic thyroid cancer that do not concentrate radioiodine

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Summary

Introduction

Differentiated thyroid carcinomas are slow growing and usually curable by the combination of surgery, radioiodine ablation and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppressive therapy. Previous clinical studies have demonstrated that RA administration induces iodine uptake in about 40% of patients, suggesting that RA could be a promising therapeutic option for radioiodine nonresponsive thyroid carcinoma [12,13,14,15].

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