Vol 69, No 6 (2018)
Case report
Published online: 2018-10-11

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False-positive radioiodine whole-body scan due to a renal cyst

Adam Maciejewski1, Rafał Czepczyński1, Marek Ruchała1
Pubmed: 30306537
Endokrynol Pol 2018;69(6):736-739.

Abstract

Patients affected by differentiated thyroid cancer are treated surgically and by ablative radioiodine therapy. A post-therapy whole-body scan allows detection of thyroid remnants or local and distant metastases, although false-positive findings may be observed. We report a case of a 75-year-old woman with follicular thyroid cancer, who underwent ablative radioiodine treatment. On post-therapy wholebody scan, abnormal uptake in the left upper abdomen was found, although stimulated thyroglobulin level was not suggestive for distant metastases of differentiated thyroid carcinoma. Additional SPECT/CT acquisition revealed focal 131I uptake located at the posterolateral wall of the left kidney corresponding to a round lesion 47 mm in maximal diameter. In order to verify this finding abdominal ultrasound and abdominal contrast-enhanced CT were performed, confirming multiple renal cysts in the left kidney; the largest one was the site of abnormal radioiodine accumulation. Despite the high incidence of renal cysts, especially in the elderly, radioiodine uptake in renal cysts
is extremely rare. Different hypotheses on the mechanism of radioiodine uptake in the cyst were proposed, among them active secretion by sodium-iodide symporter or other transporting proteins. We conclude that abnormal radioiodine uptake in renal cysts can be an exceptional finding mimicking a metastasis.

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