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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism 2009-Oct

Recombinant thyrotropin use in children and adolescents with differentiated thyroid cancer: a multicenter retrospective study.

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Markus Luster
Daria Handkiewicz-Junak
Armando Grossi
Margaret Zacharin
David Taïeb
Ofelia Cruz
Anne Hitzel
Juan Antonio Vallejo Casas
Uwe Mäder
Massimo E Dottorini

Palabras clave

Abstracto

BACKGROUND

Although recombinant human TSH (rhTSH) is widely used in differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) to aid diagnostic follow-up procedures and radioiodine thyroid remnant ablation, almost all clinical investigation was in adults.

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this study was to characterize rhTSH clinical safety and peak TSH response in DTC patients 18 yr old or younger.

METHODS

We conducted a retrospective study involving 23 tertiary referral centers in 12 European, Asian, and Oceanian countries.

METHODS

One hundred DTC patients (69% female, 31% male, 84% papillary, 61% N1, 18% M1) ages 4.9-18 yr at first rhTSH administration were studied.

METHODS

A total of 181 rhTSH courses were administered (range, one to eight per patient; 42% of patients received two or more courses), 92% using the approved adult regimen (one 0.9 mg im injection daily on two consecutive days), 34% including thyroid hormone withdrawal for less than 7 d ("mini-THW").

METHODS

Clinical adverse event (AE) incidence, type, and severity, and peak post-rhTSH serum TSH concentrations were assessed.

RESULTS

No clinical AEs occurred in 88% of rhTSH courses. Most common clinical AEs were nausea (5% of courses) and vomiting (3%). Multiple or severe AEs were rare (0.6% and 2.8% of courses, respectively); serious AEs were absent. Peak TSH concentration post-rhTSH exceeded 25 mU/liter in approximately 98% of courses. In logistic regression analyses, the rhTSH regimen, "mini-THW," peak TSH concentration, body mass index (BMI), or peak TSH concentration/unit of BMI were not associated with clinical AE occurrence. In analyses of covariance, higher BMI was associated with lower peak TSH concentrations.

CONCLUSIONS

rhTSH was clinically well tolerated in pediatric DTC patients although courses preponderantly comprised the adult regimen, and repeated courses were frequent. Both the adult and reduced-dose regimens almost always sufficiently elevate TSH in children and adolescents.

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