Radiology Case Reports (May 2020)

Personalized selective internal radiation therapy in liver metastasis of thyroid cancer with impaired liver function: A case report

  • Maxime Herchuelz, MD,
  • Gwennaëlle Marin,
  • Ivan Duran Derijckere, MD,
  • Michaël Vouche, MD, PhD,
  • Philippe Delatte, MD,
  • Vincent Donckier, MD, PhD,
  • Gabriel Liberale, MD PhD,
  • Alain Hendlisz, MD, PhD,
  • Carlos Artigas, MD,
  • Pierre Bourgeois, MD, PhD,
  • Patrick Flamen, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
pp. 548 – 551

Abstract

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Follicular thyroid cancer (FTC) is a less common form of differentiated thyroid cancer. Liver metastasis of differentiated thyroid cancer frequently occurs in the late onset of the metastatic disease, are often unrescetable and noniodine avid, leading to a poor prognosis. A 69-year-old man with a 14-year history of multi-metastatic follicular thyroid cancer was treated iteratively with 131-Iodine allowing to maintain a stable disease. Upon a recent exponential increase of the thyroglobulin, a peritoneal mass and a voluminous hepatic metastasis were discovered, comorbidities and an insufficient future remnant liver function excluded liver surgical resection. The tumour board proposed a resection of the peritoneal mass followed by selective internal radiation therapy of the liver mass. Due to the already impaired liver function, personalized dosimetry allowed a safe treatment delivering low activity to the nontumoral liver followed by a clinical and imaging response of the liver mass at 3 months. At our knowledge, this is the first case of thyroid liver metastasis treated by selective internal radiation therapy. Keywords: Liver metastasis, Personalized dosimetry, Radioembolization, Thyroid Cancer