Background: Differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) patients have an outstanding overall long-term survival rate, and certain subsets of DTC patients have a very high likelihood of disease recurrence. Radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy is a cornerstone in DTC management, but cancer cells can eventually develop resistance to RAI. Radioactive iodine-refractory DTC (RAIR-DTC) is a con- dition defined by ATA 2015 guidelines when DTC cannot concentrate RAI ab initio or loses RAI uptake ability after the initial therapy. The RAIR condition implies that RAI cannot reveal new met- astatic foci, so RAIR-DTC metabolic imaging needs new tracers. 18F-FDG PET/CT has been widely used and has demonstrated prognostic value, but 18F-FDG DTC avidity may remain low. Fibroblast activation protein inhibitors (FA-Pi)s, prostatic-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), and somatosta- tin receptor (SSTR) tracers have been proposed as theragnostic agents in experimental settings and Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides in the diagnostic trial field. Multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors are relatively new drugs approved in RAIR-DTC therapy. Despite the promising targeted setting, they relate to frequent adverse-event onset. Sorafenib and trametinib have been included in re-dif- ferentiation protocols aimed at re-inducing RAI accumulation in DTC cells. Results appear promis- ing, but not excellent. Conclusions: RAIR-DTC remains a challenging nosological entity. There are still controversies on RAIR-DTC definition and post-RAI therapy evaluation, with post-therapy whole-body scan (PT-WBS) the only validated criterion of response. The recent introduction of mul- tiple diagnostic and therapeutic agents obliges physicians to pursue a multidisciplinary approach aiming to correct drug introduction and timing choice.

Current Advances in Radioactive Iodine-Refractory Differentiated Thyroid Cancer / Volpe, Fabio; Nappi, Carmela; Zampella, Emilia; Di Donna, Erica; Maurea, Simone; Cuocolo, Alberto; Klain, Michele. - In: CURRENT ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 1718-7729. - 31:7(2024), pp. 3870-3884. [10.3390/curroncol31070286]

Current Advances in Radioactive Iodine-Refractory Differentiated Thyroid Cancer

Volpe, Fabio;Nappi, Carmela
;
Zampella, Emilia;Di Donna, Erica;Maurea, Simone;Cuocolo, Alberto;Klain, Michele
2024

Abstract

Background: Differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) patients have an outstanding overall long-term survival rate, and certain subsets of DTC patients have a very high likelihood of disease recurrence. Radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy is a cornerstone in DTC management, but cancer cells can eventually develop resistance to RAI. Radioactive iodine-refractory DTC (RAIR-DTC) is a con- dition defined by ATA 2015 guidelines when DTC cannot concentrate RAI ab initio or loses RAI uptake ability after the initial therapy. The RAIR condition implies that RAI cannot reveal new met- astatic foci, so RAIR-DTC metabolic imaging needs new tracers. 18F-FDG PET/CT has been widely used and has demonstrated prognostic value, but 18F-FDG DTC avidity may remain low. Fibroblast activation protein inhibitors (FA-Pi)s, prostatic-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), and somatosta- tin receptor (SSTR) tracers have been proposed as theragnostic agents in experimental settings and Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides in the diagnostic trial field. Multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors are relatively new drugs approved in RAIR-DTC therapy. Despite the promising targeted setting, they relate to frequent adverse-event onset. Sorafenib and trametinib have been included in re-dif- ferentiation protocols aimed at re-inducing RAI accumulation in DTC cells. Results appear promis- ing, but not excellent. Conclusions: RAIR-DTC remains a challenging nosological entity. There are still controversies on RAIR-DTC definition and post-RAI therapy evaluation, with post-therapy whole-body scan (PT-WBS) the only validated criterion of response. The recent introduction of mul- tiple diagnostic and therapeutic agents obliges physicians to pursue a multidisciplinary approach aiming to correct drug introduction and timing choice.
2024
Current Advances in Radioactive Iodine-Refractory Differentiated Thyroid Cancer / Volpe, Fabio; Nappi, Carmela; Zampella, Emilia; Di Donna, Erica; Maurea, Simone; Cuocolo, Alberto; Klain, Michele. - In: CURRENT ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 1718-7729. - 31:7(2024), pp. 3870-3884. [10.3390/curroncol31070286]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/964764
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