Clinical Evaluation of a I-124 PET/CT Based Remnant Radioiodine Ablation Decision Concept in Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Using PROBE Design

Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (2) locations...
Intervention Type: Radiation
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Thyroid nodules are a common clinical problem. Epidemiologic studies have shown the prevalence of palpable thyroid nodules to be approximately 5% in women and 1% in men living in iodine-sufficient parts of the world and up to 30% in iodine deficient regions, such as Germany. The clinical importance of thyroid nodules rests with the need to exclude thyroid cancer which occurs in 5-15%. Differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC), which includes papillary and follicular cancer, comprises the vast majority (90%) of all thyroid cancers. In Germany, approximately 7,000 new cases will be diagnosed in 2011. The yearly incidence has increased from 3.6 per 100,000 in 1973 to 8.7 per 100,000 in 2002, and this trend appears to be continuing. Recurrence-free survival is generally excellent and depends on the risk group. The role of postoperative remnant radioiodine ablation (RRIA) as the most serious question regarding the initial management of DTC still needs to be resolved even after decades of radioiodine use. American Thyroid Association directions for future research addressing these questions include: * Better understanding of the long-term risks of radioiodine use; * Improved risk stratification; Randomized controlled trials are still missing in which RRIA has proven its worth as a safe and very effective treatment that results in an improved life expectancy and a reduced recurrence rate. Many observational studies lack sufficiently high evidence. Evidence grade is rated mainly on expert level, based on non-randomized retrospective observation studies. Although RRIA in Europe is established as adjuvant standard treatment for all patients with DTC, except those with stage T1a, it remains to be shown throughout if it is beneficial for low risk and medium risk patients without metastases (M0), also known as stage I patients according to UICC/AJCC classification, accounting for 40-90% of all patients. Blood doses due to cumulative radioiodine therapy may well exceed 2 Gy, and RRIA induces an average blood dose of 0.28 Gy to the entire body. Risks as estimated from that dose are not insignificant. The question is whether or not the condition after remnant ablation justifies such an increased risk of a secondary malignancy. The probability of causation for a pharyngeal or breast tumour can well exceed the margin of a 50% after being exposed to RRIA or consecutive I-131 diagnostic imaging to explore measureable Tg levels. Even though radioiodine therapy can benefit some patients with advanced thyroid carcinoma, it is still unknown whether the risks of RRIA outweigh any discernable benefit. Undoubtedly, quality of life may be affected by adjuvant use of I-131. Study Hypothesis: The I-124 study arm may have considerable benefits for the patient included in the study. These include * enhanced tumour and risk stratification, * avoidance of unnecessary I-131 exposure in 30-89 percent of patients who were classified with low risk tumour (MACIS or AMES scoring) or stage I disease (UICC-AJCC TNM staging system), and, * improved quality of life at the same or better morbidity and mortality rates in the I-124 arm. Environmental and hospital staff related benefits include prevention or saving of I-131 exposure. This study is designed to compare effectiveness of treatments following and evaluating guideline recommendations in two assignment arms.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 80
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Histologically confirmed new diagnosis of DTC (including Hürthle-cell carcinoma)

• Age 18-80 years

• Performance Status of 0-2

• Tumor stage T1b to T4 with the possibility of lymph node involvement and distant metastasis according to the \[TNM\] staging system

• One- or two stage thyroidectomy, with or without central lymph node dissection

• Patient´s written informed consent

• Ability to comply with the protocol procedures

Locations
Other Locations
Germany
Clinic of Nuclear Medicine, University Clinic Essen
RECRUITING
Essen
University Clinic Würzburg
RECRUITING
Würzburg
Contact Information
Primary
Peter Schneider, MD, Prof.
schneider_p@ukw.de
+49931201
Backup
Ina Binse, MD
Ina.Binse@uk-essen.de
+49931201
Time Frame
Start Date: 2015-05
Estimated Completion Date: 2025-11
Participants
Target number of participants: 340
Treatments
Active_comparator: Radioiodine
Standard procedures using only I-131. All patients in this arm will have assigned I-131 ablation, followed by periodic I-131 diagnostic re-evaluations after 4-6 months as needed.
Active_comparator: I-124
I-124 PET/CT guided concept following ATA guideline recommendations after total thyroidectomy. Uptake outside of thyroid bed constitutes I-131 therapy for remnant ablation and metastasis therapy based on I-124 dosimetry. Remnant mass and/or metastasis mass will be estimated by a diagnostic CT scan simultaneously while doing PET at the optimum time point 2-3 days after administration of I-124. If there is no uptake outside of thyroid bed, no ablation will follow in stage I disease according to AJCC with the possibility of lymph node involvement but no distant metastasis and no microscopical residual disease (Patient age \<45y: any T, any N, M0; Patient age 45y or older: T1, N0, M0). Periodic follow-up may include I-124 PET/CT when indicated to determine whether or not another I-131 therapy has to follow. Thyroglobuline increase also constitutes I-124 PET/CT imaging.
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: Deutsche Krebshilfe e.V., Bonn (Germany)
Leads: University of Wuerzburg

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov