Lithium as an adjunct to radioiodine therapy in Graves’ disease for prolonging the intrathyroidal effective half-life of radioiodine

Author:

Künstner H.,Nabavi E.,Eberlein U.,Groth P.,Schümichen C.,Dunkelmann S.

Abstract

Summary:Aim: Evaluation of intrathyroidal kinetics of radioiodine with and without lithium as adjunct with respect to the increase in radiation dose delivered to the thyroid. Patients, methods: 267 patients in three groups were included in the study. Group I with 227 patients served as control group, Group II with 21 patients and Group III with 19 patients were distinguished by an intrathyroidal half-life of radioiodine below 3.5 days in the diagnostic test. Patients in Group III received 885 mg lithium carbonate a day for 2 weeks as adjunct to radioiodine therapy. Both diagnostic and therapeutic radioiodine kinetics were followed up by at least 10 uptake measurements within a minimum of 48 h. Kinetics of radioiodine were defined mathematically as balance of the thyroidal iodine intake and excretion by a twocompartment model. Results: Under therapy the maximum uptake of radioiodine was reduced by nearly 10% in all groups, in Group I, the effective half-life as well as the product of maximum uptake x effective half-life as an equivalent of radiation dose independent of thyroid volume was lowered in the same magnitude. In Group II, the energy- dose equivalent remained constant under therapy. With adjunct lithium in Group III, the effective half-life was prolonged significantly by factor 1.61 ± 0.49 and the volume- independent energy-dose equivalent by factor 1.39 ± 0.37. No severe side effects of lithium were observed. Conclusion: Using lithium as adjunct to radioiodine therapy increases the radiation dose delivered to the thyroid by 39% on average and nearly 30% of radioiodine activity can be saved in these patients. Lithium is recommended in patients with very short effective half-life in the diagnostic test in order to reduce the activity required and whole-body radiation dose.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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