6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265c37

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ultrasound Evaluation of Thyroid Gland Pathologies After Radiation Therapy and Chemotherapy to Treat Malignancy During Childhood.

Christina GiesChristoph DüberGundula StaatzDorothee Jacob-heutmannJochem KönigK. LaudemannJörg FaberAndré Lollert

subject

Maleendocrine systemCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyTime Factorsendocrine system diseasesAdolescentLymphomamedicine.medical_treatmentThyroid Gland030209 endocrinology & metabolismMalignancyCentral Nervous System Neoplasms03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHypothyroidismNeoplasmsmedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingChildRetrospective StudiesUltrasonographyUnivariate analysisChemotherapyAnalysis of VarianceRadiationLeukemiabusiness.industryCystsThyroidInfantRetrospective cohort studyChemoradiotherapyOrgan Sizemedicine.diseaseThyroid DiseasesLymphomaRadiation therapymedicine.anatomical_structureOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisChild PreschoolFemaleRadiologybusinessChemoradiotherapyFollow-Up StudiesStem Cell Transplantation

description

The purpose of this study was to evaluate correlations between treatment of malignancy by radiation therapy during childhood and the occurrence of thyroid gland pathologies detected by ultrasonography in follow-up examinations.Reductions of thyroid gland volume below 2 standard deviations of the weight-specific mean value, occurrence of ultrasonographically detectable thyroid gland pathologies, and hypothyroidism were retrospectively assessed in 103 children and adolescents 7 months to 20 years of age (median: 7 years of age) at baseline (1997-2013) treated with chemoradiation therapy (with the thyroid gland dose assessable) or with chemotherapy alone and followed by ultrasonography and laboratory examinations through 2014 (median follow-up time: 48 months).A relevant reduction of thyroid gland volume was significantly correlated with thyroid gland dose in univariate (P.001) and multivariate analyses for doses above 2 Gy. Odds ratios were 3.1 (95% confidence interval: 1.02-9.2; P=.046) for medium doses (2-25 Gy) and 14.8 (95% confidence interval: 1.4-160; P=.027) for high doses (25 Gy). Thyroid gland dose was significantly higher in patients with thyroid gland pathologies during follow-up (P=.03). Univariate analysis revealed significant correlations between hypothyroidism and thyroid gland dose (P.001).Ultrasonographically detectable changes, that is, volume reductions, pathologies, and hypothyroidism, after malignancy treatment during childhood are associated with thyroid gland dose. Both ultrasonography and laboratory follow-up examinations should be performed regularly after tumor therapy during childhood, especially if the treatment included radiation therapy.

10.1016/j.ijrobp.2015.09.016https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26545453