The authors' experience of more than 5 years in the diagnostic and therapeutic use of radioiodinated MIBG in neural crest tumors is reported. 123I/131I-MIBG scintigraphy was performed in 158 patients: 75 suspected (24 proven) pheochromocytomas (pheos), 43 neuroblastomas (NB), 20 medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC), 6 ganglioneuromas, 5 carcinoids and 1 insulinoma. Eight cases of tumors not originating from the neural crest were also investigated. The diagnostic sensitivity of the method was above 90% both in pheos and NB (primary tumors and bone metastases). The examination was less effective in localizing MTC (sensitivity = 64.4% in primary or residual/recurrent tumors). The scintigraphic outcome was negative in ganglioneuromas, carcinoids and insulinoma. Specificity was very high (greater than 95%), and no false positive results were found in tumors not deriving from the neural crest. 131I-MIBG treatment was administered to four patients with malignant pheo, nine with NB and four with MTC. Therapy resulted in a complete response in one pheo, two NB and one MTC treated after surgery or at diagnosis (one NB); it gave partial response and prolonged remission in five advanced cases (one pheo, two NB and two MTC); it resulted in temporary stabilization of the disease in one pheo and two NBs; it was ineffective in four cases.
The results obtained with interstitial brachytherapy in thirty-six low-grade cerebral gliomas (2 pilocytic astrocytomas, 23 astrocytomas and 11 oligodendrogliomas) are reported (mean follow-up: 75 months, range 37-159). All tumours were situated in locations which did not call for surgical removal as the treatment of choice. Their volume ranged from 4 to 82 cc (m = 32); the Karnofsky performance status (KPS) of the treated patients lay between 0.60 and 0.90. The sources utilized (Iridium-192 in 32 cases and Iodine-125 in 4) were implanted permanently in 22 patients and temporarily in 14, using the Talairach stereotactic apparatus. The mean peripheral dose was 89.7 Gy for the permanent implants and and 42.8 Gy with a rate of 32.05 cGy/h for the temporary implants. External beam irradiation was added for tumour volumes greater than 35 cc (19 cases) on a second target volume extending 2 cm beyond the tumoural borders treated with interstitial irradiation. The survival estimates for the entire group showed a probability of 82.9% at 60 months, of 56.8% at 96, 39.4% at 120 (m.s.t.: 112 months). The quality of life in the treated patients was satisfactory, KPS never falling below a mean score of 0.70. The extent of the target volume turned out to be the most significant factor influencing survival at the multivariate analysis. Severe neurological impairment due to radionecrosis occurred in 4 patients (11%), three of them requiring surgical decompression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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