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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sodium iodide I 131 treatment for dogs with thyroid tumors

By Turrel, Jane M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2006·Veterinary Oncology Specialties, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Sodium iodide I 131 treatment of dogs with nonresectable thyroid tumors: 39 cases (1990-2003).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 39 dogs with nonresectable thyroid tumors received treatment with sodium iodide I 131 to see if it could help improve their condition. Before treatment, some dogs had a single tumor while others had tumors that had spread, and their thyroid hormone levels varied. The dogs with localized tumors lived significantly longer after treatment, with an average survival time of about 839 days, compared to 366 days for those with metastasis. While most dogs showed improvement, three dogs experienced serious side effects related to the treatment. Overall, sodium iodide I 131 therapy appeared to extend survival for these dogs, but monitoring for potential side effects is important.

People also search for: dog thyroid tumor treatment · sodium iodide I 131 for dogs · dog thyroid cancer survival rate

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine outcome for dogs with nonresectable thyroid carcinomas treated with sodium iodide I 131 and identify factors associated with outcome. DESIGN: Retrospective case series. Animals-39 dogs. PROCEDURES: A definitive or presumptive diagnosis of thyroid tumor was made on the basis of cytologic or histologic examination, abnormal accumulation of sodium pertechnetate Tc 99m during scintigraphy, or both, and dogs were treated with sodium iodide I 131. Dogs with cervical thyroid tumors were evaluated 3 to 6 weeks after 131I therapy, and residual tumor was resected when feasible. RESULTS: Prior to 131I therapy, 32 dogs had a solitary mass and 7 had metastases; 21 were hyperthyroid, 16 were euthyroid, and 2 were hypothyroid. Median survival time for dogs with local or regional tumors (ie, stage II or III) was significantly longer (839 days) than median survival time for dogs with metastasis (366 days). Tumor site (cervical vs ectopic), dose of sodium iodide I 131, age, body weight, treatment (131I therapy alone vs 131I therapy followed by surgery), and serum T4 concentration prior to 131I therapy were not significantly associated with survival time. Three dogs died of radioiodine-associated myelosuppression within 3 months after treatment, but no specific factor associated with development of toxicosis was identified. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggested that 131I therapy may result in prolonged survival times in dogs with nonresectable thyroid tumors, regardless of serum thyroxine concentration prior to treatment. Dogs undergoing 131I therapy should be monitored for signs of bone marrow suppression.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16910854/