REPLY: I thank Drs. Basu and Abhyankar for their letter and excellent comments on the use of preablation radioiodine scintigraphy for the management of thyroid cancer patients. As outlined in their letter, a classic teaching in nuclear medicine was that preablation radioiodine planar scans provide important information that may influence 131I therapeutic decisions. The findings on preablation scans defined the target of radioiodine therapy (remnant ablation, nodal metastases, or distant metastases), directly affecting the selection of prescribed 131I activity for ablative or tumoricidal treatment. Despite these advantages, over the years—as the controversy over stunning developed—the field evolved toward fixed-dose 131I ablation of residual thyroid tissue after thyroidectomy, because posttherapy 131I scans with better count density appeared to provide more diagnostic information than preablation scans. In this process, the contribution of preablation scans to therapeutic decisions was minimized, and staging, risk stratification, and management decisions became increasingly predicated by clinical–pathologic criteria (i.e., age of patient and results of surgical pathology) as reflected in several guidelines (1–4). Advancing imaging technology with SPECT/CT facilitates accurate interpretation of classic planar scintigraphy, validating the classic teaching that the decision to use or omit radioiodine therapy should not be based solely on clinical and histopathologic criteria but should include specific thyroid cancer imaging to evaluate for the presence of regional and distant metastases. The contribution of fusion radioiodine SPECT/CT for characterization of focal central neck and distant activity in patients with thyroid cancer has been increasingly recognized, as summarized in 2 recent review articles (5,6), bringing into focus the use of preablation SPECT/CT for completion of staging and risk stratification before 131I therapy. The current SNMMI Practice Guideline for Therapy of Thyroid Disease with 131I support the view that routine preablation scintigraphy can be useful in guiding 131I therapy and discusses the selection of prescribed 131I activity for treatment (7). This recently updated guideline reflects the evolution toward a treatment approach that integrates the elements of clinical and histopathologic risk stratification with imaging information for arriving at an individualized therapeutic decision. And this precisely addresses the excellent points made by Drs. Basu and Abhyankar in their letter to the editor, which I very much welcomed.
Footnotes
Published online Oct. 10, 2012.
- © 2012 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc.