Dear Sirs,
I am writing regarding a recent article entitled ‘Clinicoradiological characteristics of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma and renal metastasis: case series with follow up’ by Kand and Basu.Reference Kand and Basu1 In this paper, the authors attempted to demonstrate clinicoradiological characteristics in a series of patients with rare occurrence of renal metastasis from primary thyroid carcinoma. It was surprising that a journal of your repute accepted this paper in which pathological proof of renal metastasis was lacking in half of the patients (two of four patients).
Firstly, the authors’ claim that the diagnosis of renal metastasis was primarily confirmed by radioiodine whole-body scintigraphy may not be true. It is well known that radioiodine undergoes physiological excretion through the renal system. Moreover, certain renal abnormalities such as cysts are known to have false positive radioiodine uptake.Reference Sutter, Masilungan and Stadalnik2–Reference Campenni, Ruggeri, Giovinazzo, Sindoni, Santoro and Baldari5 Even if an ultrasound or computed tomography correlation has been obtained, fine needle aspiration of the renal lesion is imperative to establish the diagnosis of renal metastasis.
Secondly, variable expression of sodium iodide symporter in different metastatic sites, or selective loss of sodium iodide symporter expression, could explain the rarity of detection of renal metastatic lesion from a primary site in the thyroid.Reference Smallridge, Castro, Morris, Young, Reynolds and Merino6 This is different from a true ‘flip-flop’ where a lesion that was initially concentrating radioiodine subsequently loses this ability as it undergoes dedifferentiation. No such lesion (i.e. initially radioiodine avid and later (in follow-up scans) fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose avid) was reported by the authors in this paper.
Thirdly, the thyroglobulin secreting nature of these lesions is of immense clinical relevance, as a lower level of thyroglobulin on follow up would demonstrate treatment response. Hence, to state the value of thyroglobulin as more than 250 ng/ml, and not the actual value, may not be clinically relevant in the follow up of these patients.