Thyroid Uptake of Liquid Versus Capsule 131I Tracers in Hyperthyroid Patients Treated with Liquid 131I
The amount of 131 I used to treat hyperthyroid patients is based in part on the 24-hour thyroid uptake of a diagnostic amount of radioiodine (tracer). We compared the 24-hour uptake of an 131I tracer administered in liquid or capsule form to the 24-hour uptake of 131 I therapy administered as liquid...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Thyroid (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 1999-04, Vol.9 (4), p.347-352 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The amount of
131
I used to treat hyperthyroid patients is based in part on the 24-hour thyroid uptake of a diagnostic amount of radioiodine (tracer). We compared the 24-hour uptake of an 131I tracer administered in liquid or capsule form to the 24-hour uptake of
131
I therapy administered as liquid. Sixty-five hyperthyroid patients with Graves' disease were evaluated and subsequently treated with radioiodine. The liquid group (45 patients) received a liquid
131
I tracer (1.85 MBq [0.05 mCi]) and the capsule group (20 patients) received a capsule
131
I tracer (1.63 MBq [0.044 mCi]). Probe calibration factors were the same for the liquid and capsule
131
I standards. All patients received therapeutic amounts of
131
I [114.7-1106.3 MBq [3.1-29.9 mCi]) in liquid form. Therapy uptakes were obtained using the same collimated uptake probe modified with a calibrated lead shield to attenuate the high photon flux. The mean therapeutic uptake was the same for both groups (58%). The mean diagnostic uptake for the capsule group, however, was less than the mean diagnostic uptake for the liquid group (44% vs. 63%). The mean diagnostic uptake for the capsule group was significantly lower than the mean therapeutic uptake for this group (44% vs. 58%), whereas the mean diagnostic and therapeutic uptakes were similar for the group receiving a liquid tracer (63% vs. 58%). In conclusion, diagnostic uptakes performed with a liquid tracer more accurately predicted liquid therapy uptakes than diagnostic uptakes performed with a capsule tracer. This raises concern about the bioavailability of
131
I in capsule form and has implications for determining the amount of
131
I to administer for therapy. Patients whose
131
I therapy was based on the uptake of a capsule tracer received a higher than intended amount of radiation to the thyroid gland. |
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ISSN: | 1050-7256 1557-9077 |
DOI: | 10.1089/thy.1999.9.347 |