Selumetinib-enhanced radioiodine uptake in advanced thyroid cancer Journal Article


Authors: Ho, A. L.; Grewal, R. K.; Leboeuf, R.; Sherman, E. J.; Pfister, D. G.; Deandreis, D.; Pentlow, K. S.; Zanzonico, P. B.; Haque, S.; Gavane, S.; Ghossein, R. A.; Ricarte-Filho, J. C.; Domínguez, J. M.; Shen, R.; Tuttle, R. M.; Larson, S. M.; Fagin, J. A.
Article Title: Selumetinib-enhanced radioiodine uptake in advanced thyroid cancer
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Metastatic thyroid cancers that are refractory to radioiodine (iodine-131) are associated with a poor prognosis. In mouse models of thyroid cancer, selective mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway antagonists increase the expression of the sodium-iodide symporter and uptake of iodine. Their effects in humans are not known. METHODS: We conducted a study to determine whether the MAPK kinase (MEK) 1 and MEK2 inhibitor selumetinib (AZD6244, ARRY-142886) could reverse refractoriness to radioiodine in patients with metastatic thyroid cancer. After stimulation with thyrotropin alfa, dosimetry with iodine-124 positron-emission tomography (PET) was performed before and 4 weeks after treatment with selumetinib (75 mg twice daily). If the second iodine-124 PET study indicated that a dose of iodine-131 of 2000 cGy or more could be delivered to the metastatic lesion or lesions, therapeutic radioiodine was administered while the patient was receiving selumetinib. RESULTS: Of 24 patients screened for the study, 20 could be evaluated. The median age was 61 years (range, 44 to 77), and 11 patients were men. Nine patients had tumors with BRAF mutations, and 5 patients had tumors with mutations of NRAS. Selumetinib increased the uptake of iodine-124 in 12 of the 20 patients (4 of 9 patients with BRAF mutations and 5 of 5 patients with NRAS mutations). Eight of these 12 patients reached the dosimetry threshold for radioiodine therapy, including all 5 patients with NRAS mutations. Of the 8 patients treated with radioiodine, 5 had confirmed partial responses and 3 had stable disease; all patients had decreases in serum thyroglobulin levels (mean reduction, 89%). No toxic effects of grade 3 or higher attributable by the investigators to selumetinib were observed. One patient received a diagnosis of myelodysplastic syndrome more than 51 weeks after radioiodine treatment, with progression to acute leukemia. CONCLUSIONS: Selumetinib produces clinically meaningful increases in iodine uptake and retention in a subgroup of patients with thyroid cancer that is refractory to radioiodine; the effectiveness may be greater in patients with RAS-mutant disease. (Funded by the American Thyroid Association and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00970359.). Copyright © 2013 Massachusetts Medical Society.
Journal Title: New England Journal of Medicine
Volume: 368
Issue: 7
ISSN: 0028-4793
Publisher: Massachusetts Medical Society  
Date Published: 2013-02-14
Start Page: 623
End Page: 632
Language: English
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1209288
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 23406027
PMCID: PMC3615415
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 1 March 2013" - "CODEN: NEJMA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. James A Fagin
    181 Fagin
  2. Ronald A Ghossein
    486 Ghossein
  3. Robert M Tuttle
    483 Tuttle
  4. Eric J Sherman
    344 Sherman
  5. Ronglai Shen
    205 Shen
  6. Ravinder K Grewal
    82 Grewal
  7. Sofia S Haque
    149 Haque
  8. Rebecca Leboeuf
    13 Leboeuf
  9. David G Pfister
    389 Pfister
  10. Somali C Gavane
    24 Gavane
  11. Pat B Zanzonico
    357 Zanzonico
  12. Alan Loh Ho
    241 Ho
  13. Steven M Larson
    959 Larson
  14. Keith S Pentlow
    70 Pentlow