No reinduction of clinically relevant radioiodine uptake after lenvatinib treatment in radioidine-refractory differentiated thyroid cancer

Maaike Dotinga, Lioe Fee de Geus-Oei, Floris H.P. van Velden, Mette K. Stam, Jan W.T. Heemskerk, Petra Dibbets-Schneider, Frits Smit, Dennis Vriens, Ellen Kapiteijn*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Prior studies show that short-term treatment using tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) can reinduce radioiodine uptake and warrant 131I therapy in radioiodine-refractory differentiated thyroid cancer (RAI-R DTC). We aim to evaluate the potential of standard-of-care TKI lenvatinib to reinduce clinically meaningful radioiodine retention. Methods: Nine RAI-R DTC patients starting lenvatinib treatment for progressive advanced or metastatic disease, were included and underwent rhTSH-stimulated 124I dosimetric procedures at baseline, week 6 (N=7) and week 12 (N=8). At all timepoints, the fraction of patients eligible for 131I therapy with a maximal activity of 7.4 GBq was assessed. Patients were considered eligible if at least one target lesion showed an expected mean absorbed dose ≥20 Gy. In total, 23 target lesions were segmented on124I PET/CT images and their volumes estimated using low-dose CT images. Lesion size-specific recovery correction was applied to the measured mean activity concentration at each timepoint. Tumor dosimetry was performed using a mono-exponential fit and S-values from an internal dosimetry program for diagnostic nuclear medicine based on the ICRP adult reference voxel phantoms (IDAC-Dose2.1). Mean absorbed lesion dose per administered activity (LDpA), 24h-uptake and residence time in target lesions were compared between time points. Results: By our definition, none of the patients were found eligible for 131I therapy at any timepoint. Lenvatinib-induced partial response was observed in 59% and 75% of target lesions at week 6 and 12, respectively. Median LDpA was 0.08 (IQR: 0.04-0.17), 0.18 (0.08-0.36) and 0.17 (0.09-0.37) Gy/GBq for week 0, 6 and 12, respectively (p=0.08). The 24h-uptake and residence time were comparable between timepoints (p>0.22). Conclusion: Redifferentiation of RAI-R DTC to reinduce radioiodine uptake to a level that warrants 131I therapy may not be established by short-term lenvatinib treatment. Multi-targeted TKIs may not be as potent as selective TKIs in reinducing clinically meaningful radioiodine retention.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages10
JournalEuropean Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • I
  • Dosimetry
  • Lenvatinib
  • Radioiodine refractory
  • Redifferentiation
  • Thyroid cancer

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