Abstract

Radioactive iodine (RAI) is safe and effective in most patients with hyperthyroidism but not all individuals are cured by the first dose, and most develop post-RAI hypothyroidism. Postoperative RAI therapy for remnant ablation is successful in 80–90% of thyroid cancer patients and sometimes induces remission of nonresectable cervical and/or distant metastatic disease but the effective tumor dose is usually not precisely known and must be moderated to avoid short- and long-term adverse effects on other tissues. The Collar Therapy Indicator (COTI) is a radiation detection device embedded in a cloth collar secured around the patient’s neck and connected to a recording and data transmission box. In previously published experience, the data can be collected at multiple time points, reflecting local cervical RAI exposure and correlating well with conventional methods. We evaluated the real-time uptake of RAI in patients with hyperthyroid Graves’ disease and thyroid cancer. We performed a pilot feasibility prospective study. Data were analyzed using R© (version 4.0.3, The R Foundation for Statistical Computing, 2020), and Python (version 3.6, Matplotlib version 3.0.3). The COTI was able to provide a quantitative temporal pattern of uptake within the thyroid in persons with Graves’ disease and lateralized the remnant tissue in persons with thyroid cancer. The study has demonstrated that the portable collar radiation detection device outside of a healthcare facility is accurate and feasible for use after administration of RAI for diagnostic studies and therapy to provide a complete collection of fractional target radioactivity data compared to that traditionally acquired with clinic-based measurements at one or two time-points.Clinical Trials Registration NCT03517579, DOR 5/7/2018.

Highlights

  • For 80 years, radioactive iodine (RAI) has been a key therapeutic modality for certain forms of hyperthyroidism and differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC)[1,2]

  • This study evaluated the real-time uptake of RAI in persons with hyperthyroid Graves disease and thyroid cancer

  • COTI stands for Collar Therapy Indicator and is a non-invasive medical device that indicates gamma radiation activities taken from patients undergoing I-131 treatment for thyroid diseases like thyroid cancer and hyperthyroidism

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Summary

Introduction

For 80 years, radioactive iodine (RAI) has been a key therapeutic modality for certain forms of hyperthyroidism and differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC)[1,2]. This study evaluated the real-time uptake of RAI in persons with hyperthyroid Graves disease and thyroid cancer. To perform a pilot (exploratory) study using a novel AG Medical Collar Therapy Indicator (COTI) to evaluate the variability in radioiodine kinetics across patients treated for hyperthyroid Graves disease and postoperative thyroid remnant ablation for thyroid cancer.

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