Medullary Thyroid Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Use of Lu177 in the Treatment of Progressive and Unresectable Metastatic Medullary Thyroid Cancer
Medullary thyroid cancer is a neuroendocrine tumour. As so, it has somatostatin receptors in its membrane. Furthermore, very little is available to treat patients who have disease progression. The investigators hypothesized that those tumors may respond to 177-Lu-DOTA Tyr3-octreotate which is a ligand to somatostatin receptors.
Medullary thyroid carcinomas can also be located by scintigraphy with 111In-DTPA
(diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid) -octreotide. In some studies, there is a sensitivity
for the detection of these tumors by this method, 50-70%. The relationship of calcitonin and
carcinoembryonic antigen levels were significantly higher in patients in whom scintigraphy
was performed with 111In-DTPA-octreotide. This implies that somatostatin receptors can be
detected "in vivo" for different forms of medullary thyroid carcinoma Based on the specific
binding of the analogs of somatostatin receptors present on the membrane of some tumors such
as medullary thyroid been possible to devise a therapy to target-directed using both
beta-emitting radionuclides (which have therapeutic properties) coupled to such molecules.
The main radiopharmaceuticals used for this purpose are currently 177
Lu-DOTA-Tyr3-OCTREOTATE or 90Yttrium-DOTA]-TOC.
The medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is a rare neuroendocrine tumor, accounting for only
4.9% of total thyroid carcinomas, however, compared to well differentiated carcinoma,
presents a worse prognosis. The tumor staging, and restaging is essential since surgery is
the only curative method. Elevated plasma concentrations of calcitonin (CT) and / or high
levels of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), biochemical markers of MTC, suggest the presence
of residual malignant disease / recurrence or metastasis at a distance. After surgery
aggressive 40% of patients have persistent disease and about 10%, with undetectable
post-surgery CT, develop tumor recurrence. At this point the therapeutic options are scarce
and not available in our area. Although the investigators use the structural radiological
study using ultrasound, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging for staging of
the disease, they do not provide functional information. In this context, nuclear medicine
examinations can add data such as growth potential and expression pattern of receptors for
diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. In 2007, Ong SC. et al. Showed that 18 FDG PET / CT
have the ability to detect residual disease, recurrent or metastatic disease with a
sensitivity of 78% but only when calcitonin is up 1000pg/ml. Already Iten et al. Using the
principle that these tumors express receptors for the somatostatin used OctreoScan ® and
subsequent treatment with 90Yttrium-DOTA]-TOC showing not only an advantage for the location
of the disease and the possibility of making an image guided therapy by. These authors also
demonstrated a clinical benefit to the extent that 25% of the patients showed reduced
calcitonin. The investigators hypothesized that those tumors may respond to 177-Lu-DOTA
Tyr3-octreotate.
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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