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  • Title: Radiation dose to patients and relatives incident to 131I therapy.
    Author: Zanzonico PB.
    Journal: Thyroid; 1997 Apr; 7(2):199-204. PubMed ID: 9133684.
    Abstract:
    Radioiodine long has proven to be a safe and effective treatment for thyroid disease. Nonetheless, persisting concerns regarding radiogenic stochastic risks (e.g., carcinogenesis) to patients, their families, and the general public have led regulators to establish criteria for release of 131I-containing patients from medical confinement, with limits ranging from as low as 2 mCi in some parts of Europe to as high as 30 mCi in the United States. To optimize clinical efficacy and cost-effectiveness of 131I therapy, such regulations should be based on logical dosimetric considerations. The thyroidal absorbed dose, proportional to maximum uptake and effective half-life and inversely proportional to mass, is typically approximately 1,500 rad/mCi of 131I administered to a euthyroid adult (based on a thyroid maximum uptake of 25%, effective half-life equivalent to the physical half-life of 131I (8.04 days), and mass of 20 g). As thyroid uptake increases from 0% to 100%, extrathyroidal absorbed doses range from a minimum of 0.15 to 0.5 rad/mCi for breast and gonads to a maximum of 1.5 to 2 rad/mCi for stomach and salivary glands; the absorbed doses of the urinary bladder wall, in contrast, decrease with increasing thyroid uptake, from 2 to 0.6 rad/mCi. In hyperthyroid patients (approximately 15%) with a small iodine pool (so-called small patients), the short effective half-life of radioiodine in the thyroid and high serum concentrations of long-lived protein-bound 131I result in a standard 7,000-rad absorbed dose for treatment of Graves' disease requiring an administered activity of 28 mCi of 131I and yielding a prohibitively high blood absorbed dose of 150 rad. Importantly, once the fetal thyroid begins to function and accumulate radioiodine at a gestational age of 10-12 weeks, fetal thyroid absorbed doses as large as 5,000 rad/mCi of 131I administered to the mother can result. Thus, pregnancy is an absolute contraindication to administration of 131I because of the risk of radiogenic cretinism. Based on actual measurements of thyroid activity and of external absorbed dose, the total thyroid and mean extrathyroidal absorbed doses to adult family members from immediately released 131I-treated patients are approximately 0.01 and approximately 0.02 rad/mCi administered, respectively, yielding an effective dose of approximately 0.02 rem/mCi. A maximum permissible effective dose of 0.5 rem for adults therefore is consistent with a release criterion of 30 mCi of retained 131I. Lower-activity release criteria therefore may be unnecessarily restrictive.
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