Abstract
Distant metastasis (DM) is the dominant negative prognosis for thyroid carcinoma. Radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy serves as an effective treatment for thyroid carcinoma. However, resistance to RAI occurs in patients with DMs. The present study aims to discriminate patients who may benefit from RAI. We extracted patients with thyroid cancer in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program and analyzed thyroid cancer–specific survival after radiotherapy based on age and grade subgroups. A total of 1608 patients having DMs were eligible, including 521 (32.4%) cases with bone metastasis, 90 (5.6%) cases with brain metastasis, 158 (9.8%) cases with liver metastasis, 995 (61.9%) cases with lung metastasis, and 50 (3.1%) cases with other metastases. Advanced age, poor differentiation, follicular carcinoma, lymphatic metastasis, tumor size >10 mm, and extracapsular invasion are associated with pulmonary metastases. With respect to patients with DM, RAI therapy improved the survival in the age <45 years group and the well-/moderately differentiated group. For patients with pulmonary metastasis, RAI improved the survival in the higher grade group but did not have a strong effect in the better grade group. Our data indicate that the disparity of metastatic sites has different risk factors. Similarly, this finding indicates that RAI should be precisely applied to patients who undergo DM but are young and have well-/moderately differentiated tumors and may improve survival in pulmonary metastasis patients with poor grade tumors.
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