Table 7.
Issue | Example | Possible consequence |
---|---|---|
Previous radiation dose from prior diagnostics and treatment | High cumulative radiation dose | Avoidance, when possible, of CT scan or I-131 in the evaluation and treatment of DTC |
Previous exposure to toxic agents for the childhood cancer | Bleomycin increases the risk of pulmonary dysfunction Alkylating agents and abdominal irradiation increase the risk of gonadal dysfunction Total body irradiation or 131I-MIBG treatment increases the risk of bone marrow toxicity and tertiary malignancies Chest irradiation increases the risk for breast cancer |
May increase the risk for adverse effects of I-131 in the treatment for DTC |
Possibility of the presence of a genetic predisposition syndrome | Possible underlying genetic mutation may be present, both causing the childhood malignancy and the thyroid malignancy; the fact that an individual has already had cancer during childhood and subsequently develops thyroid cancer may indicate a germline genetic susceptibility to develop cancer | May influence the decision to use adjuvant treatment with I-131 with regard to the risk of developing a third malignancy |
Risk of cardiotoxicity and prescribing levothyroxine therapy | Anthracycline chemotherapy agents or chest irradiation may increase the risk of cardiotoxicity | Consider keeping TSH levels in the lower normal but not in suppressed range |
Psychological aspects | Fear of unfavorable prognosis similar to the previous cancer | The psychological impact of DTC diagnosis as a second primary malignancy may be higher than the diagnosis of sporadic DTC |
DTC, differentiated thyroid carcinoma; MIBG, meta-iodobenzylguanidine; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone.
Adapted, with permission, from van Santen et al. (136).