Objectives: Radioactive iodine therapy is considered for patients with certain clinicopathological factors that predict a significant risk of recurrence, distant metastases of thyroid cancer or disease-specific mortality. The aim of the study was to investigate the association between polymorphisms of genes, products of which are involved in the processes of DNA damage response and autophagy, and the adverse reactions of radioiodine therapy in thyroid cancer patients.
Methods: The study included 181 patients (37 men, 144 women; median age 56 [41; 66.3] years) with histologically confirmed thyroid cancer and a history of thyroidectomy who received radioiodine therapy. , , , , , and polymorphisms were determined by allele-specific realtime-PCR.
Results: The frequency of adverse reactions was the following: gastrointestinal symptoms - 57.9 %, local symptoms - 65.8 %, cerebral symptoms - 46.8 %, fatigue - 54.4 %; signs of sialoadenitis six months after radioiodine therapy - 25.2 %. TT genotype carriers of rs1864183 had higher frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms (vs. CC+CT), the CC genotype carriers of rs10514231 had significantly more frequent cerebral symptoms (vs. CT+TT), as well as AA genotype carriers of rs1800469 (vs. AG+GG). CC genotype of rs10514231 increased the incidence of radioiodine-induced fatigue, whereas GA genotype of the rs11212570 had a protective role against fatigue. rs1800469 was associated with signs of sialoadenitis six months after radioiodine therapy.
Conclusions: Genetic factors may contribute to the occurrence of adverse reactions of radioiodine therapy in thyroid cancer patients.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/dmpt-2023-0007 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!