Abstract

AbstractDetermining the choice and the goal is key element for decision-making of a systemic radionuclide therapy. They should be clearly defined in deciding and individualizing the dose and regimen. For iodine-131 metaiodobenzylguanidine (131I-mIBG) therapy, the important considerations during dose fractionation include disease burden, tumor biology, functional symptoms, and associated comorbidities, all of which are important determinants for the intent and course of treatment. Herein, we present the case of a 67-year-old elderly female with highly functional metastatic recurrent extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma (presenting 42 years after the primary surgery and 32 years following excision of pararenal recurrence) with multiple comorbidities including single kidney and borderline renal compromise, treated successfully with a relatively lower dose of 131I-mIBG (cumulative dose of 22.2 GBq in four cycles with a mean dose of 5.7 GBq per therapy cycle). The excellent tumor burden reduction, hormonal tumor marker response, and most importantly asymptomatic status could be achieved with the administered dose. On follow-up, none of the pretherapeutic parameters (including renal function) showed any further derangement compared with the baseline during next 24 months following the treatment. All cycles were well tolerated with only reversible hematological toxicity that normalized without any active intervention. The report is intended to provide some guidance for future therapeutic regimens.

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