Abstract
Differentiated thyroid cancer is one of the most common malignant diseases of the endocrine system. Usually, it responds well to the standard treatment (surgery + radioiodine therapy), especially at early stages. During both treatment and dynamic observation, distant metastases are detected in 10–15 % of patients. In these cases, the patients continue treatment with radioactive iodine. If tumor cells have insufficient ability to capture and retain 131I or completely lose this ability, the effect of radioiodine therapy becomes limited and the disease progresses during therapy which leads to 5–10 % decrease in 10-year survival. The main problem in treatment of differentiated thyroid cancer is communication between radiologists in centers performing radioiodine therapy and clinical oncologists performing surgeries and observation at patient’s place of residence. For both specialists, the main goal is to identify clinical situations where early and effective treatment intervention can be beneficial without the risk of overdiagnosis and excessive treatment.The article considers common questions arising during multidisciplinary interactions with radiologists of radioiodine centers and presents concise guidelines on the observation and treatment procedures for patients with differentiated thyroid cancer.
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