Radiotherapy with iodine-131 in recurrent malignant struma ovarii.
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Radiotherapy with iodine-131 in recurrent malignant struma ovarii. / Brenner, Winfried; Bohuslavizki, K H; Wolf, H; Sippel, C; Clausen, M; Henze, E.
In: Eur J Nucl Med, Vol. 23, No. 1, 1, 1996, p. 91-94.Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journal › SCORING: Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiotherapy with iodine-131 in recurrent malignant struma ovarii.
AU - Brenner, Winfried
AU - Bohuslavizki, K H
AU - Wolf, H
AU - Sippel, C
AU - Clausen, M
AU - Henze, E
PY - 1996
Y1 - 1996
N2 - Malignant struma ovarii is a very rare disease and, therefore, there is neither common agreement on treatment regimens nor sufficient follow-up experience. We present a case of a 49-year-old woman with malignant struma ovarii of the follicular type, who received ablative radioiodine treatment after thyroidectomy and surgical removal of the primary tumour. During follow-up examinations an increasing thyroglobulin level was found, caused by a tumour relapse with suspected urinary bladder infiltration on CT and proven uptake of radioiodine on whole-body scanning with iodine-131. After administration of 6GBq 131I, complete tumour regression was achieved with no evidence of a new relapse during a 30-month follow-up period. Correspondingly, repeated thyroglobulin measurements were all negative. This case demonstrates the benefit of combined surgical and radioiodine treatment of malignant struma ovarii for both monitoring and therapy of relapse or metastases; thus, the same therapeutic regimen as is employed in primary differentiated thyroid carcinoma may be recommended.
AB - Malignant struma ovarii is a very rare disease and, therefore, there is neither common agreement on treatment regimens nor sufficient follow-up experience. We present a case of a 49-year-old woman with malignant struma ovarii of the follicular type, who received ablative radioiodine treatment after thyroidectomy and surgical removal of the primary tumour. During follow-up examinations an increasing thyroglobulin level was found, caused by a tumour relapse with suspected urinary bladder infiltration on CT and proven uptake of radioiodine on whole-body scanning with iodine-131. After administration of 6GBq 131I, complete tumour regression was achieved with no evidence of a new relapse during a 30-month follow-up period. Correspondingly, repeated thyroglobulin measurements were all negative. This case demonstrates the benefit of combined surgical and radioiodine treatment of malignant struma ovarii for both monitoring and therapy of relapse or metastases; thus, the same therapeutic regimen as is employed in primary differentiated thyroid carcinoma may be recommended.
M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
VL - 23
SP - 91
EP - 94
IS - 1
M1 - 1
ER -