Thyroid Cancer Treatment

Radioiodine Therapy —
Precision Treatment
for Thyroid Cancer

Radioiodine (I-131) therapy exploits the thyroid gland's unique ability to absorb iodine — delivering targeted radiation directly and selectively to thyroid cancer cells while sparing the rest of the body. It is the most site-specific systemic cancer treatment available, and is planned in close coordination with thyroid surgery.

Speciality
Thyroid Surgery & Oncology
Surgeon
Dr. Vinod T. Gore — Head & Neck Surgical Oncologist
📍
Location
Sahyadri Manipal Hospitals, Pune

What Is Radioiodine (I-131) Therapy?

Radioiodine therapy uses radioactive iodine (Iodine-131 or I-131) to destroy thyroid tissue. The thyroid gland is the only organ in the body that actively absorbs and concentrates iodine — a property it uses to produce thyroid hormones. Differentiated thyroid cancer cells retain this ability, making them uniquely targetable.

When a patient swallows I-131 (as a capsule or liquid), it is absorbed into the bloodstream and selectively taken up by thyroid tissue and differentiated thyroid cancer cells — wherever they are in the body. The radioactive iodine then emits beta radiation from within these cells, destroying them while causing minimal damage to surrounding normal tissue.

This makes RAI one of the most precise systemic cancer treatments available — it can treat thyroid cancer cells even in distant sites such as the lungs or bones, as long as those cells retain iodine-uptake ability. The treatment is given as a single oral dose and is generally well tolerated.

A Note from Dr. Gore Thyroid Surgeon · Head & Neck Oncologist · 30 Years Experience

The success of radioiodine therapy depends directly on the quality of thyroid surgery that precedes it. A properly performed total thyroidectomy — removing all normal thyroid tissue — maximises the uptake of I-131 into residual cancer cells, making the treatment far more effective.

I plan each thyroidectomy with the RAI strategy already in mind. The extent of surgery, the decision on central neck dissection, and the post-operative TSH target are all coordinated before the patient even meets the nuclear medicine physician.

— Dr. Vinod T. Gore, MBBS MS FAIS FIAGES FARIS (Edin)

How Radioiodine Therapy Works

The therapy exploits one of the most selective biological properties in medicine — the thyroid's unique ability to absorb iodine from the bloodstream.

STEP 01

Iodine Uptake

The patient swallows I-131 as a capsule. It is absorbed from the gut and enters the bloodstream — circulating throughout the body.

STEP 02

Selective Concentration

Only thyroid cells and differentiated thyroid cancer cells actively absorb the iodine — concentrating the radioactivity precisely where it is needed.

STEP 03

Beta Radiation Destroys Cells

I-131 emits beta radiation within the thyroid cells — damaging their DNA irreparably and causing them to die. The range of beta radiation is just 1–2mm, sparing adjacent tissue.

STEP 04

Post-Treatment Scan

A whole-body scan 5–7 days after treatment maps all areas of iodine uptake — confirming ablation and detecting any distant metastases not seen on prior imaging.

Radioiodine Response by Cancer Type

Not all thyroid cancers respond to radioiodine. Response depends on whether cancer cells retain the sodium-iodide symporter (NIS) — the mechanism that allows iodine uptake.

Responds Well to RAI

Papillary Thyroid Cancer (PTC)

The most common thyroid cancer (80–85% of cases). Differentiated cells retain iodine-uptake ability. Highly responsive to RAI — excellent prognosis with surgery + RAI in intermediate and high-risk disease.

RAI after surgery: Recommended for intermediate and high-risk PTC. The combination of total thyroidectomy and RAI ablation achieves excellent disease control.
Responds Well to RAI

Follicular Thyroid Cancer (FTC)

Second most common differentiated thyroid cancer. Retains iodine-uptake ability — responds well to RAI, particularly useful for treating haematogenous metastases to lungs and bones.

RAI after surgery: Strongly recommended. FTC tends to spread via blood — RAI can treat distant metastases effectively when they are iodine-avid.
Variable Response

Hürthle Cell Carcinoma

A variant of follicular cancer. Hürthle cells have reduced sodium-iodide symporter expression — many are poorly iodine-avid or completely RAI-resistant. Response is unpredictable.

RAI after surgery: May be tried, but response rates are lower. Treatment decisions based on I-131 diagnostic scan uptake results. Targeted therapy may be preferred for RAI-refractory disease.
Does Not Respond to RAI

Medullary & Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer

Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) arises from C-cells (parafollicular cells) — which do not produce thyroid hormone and do not absorb iodine. RAI has no role. Anaplastic thyroid cancer is undifferentiated and also non-iodine-avid.

Treatment: MTC — surgery + targeted therapy (Vandetanib, Cabozantinib) for advanced disease. Anaplastic — multimodal treatment including surgery, chemoradiation, targeted therapy. RAI is NOT used in either.

When Is Radioiodine Therapy Given?

RAI is used in four distinct clinical situations — each with a specific goal. The indication always follows thyroid surgery and is guided by ATA risk stratification.

01 / INDICATION

Post-surgical Ablation

Destroys residual normal thyroid tissue remaining after total thyroidectomy. This improves the sensitivity of follow-up thyroglobulin monitoring and whole-body scanning for recurrence detection.

Standard after total thyroidectomy for intermediate and high-risk differentiated thyroid cancer.

Remnant Ablation
02 / INDICATION

Treatment of Metastatic DTC

Targets and destroys iodine-avid distant metastases — including lymph node, lung, and bone metastases — that retain iodine-uptake ability. Can achieve remission even in stage IV disease.

Pulmonary micrometastases, bone metastases from follicular thyroid cancer.

Therapeutic Intent
03 / INDICATION

Hyperthyroidism

I-131 used to reduce overactive thyroid tissue in Graves' disease, toxic multinodular goitre, or toxic adenoma — destroying enough thyroid tissue to render the patient euthyroid or hypothyroid.

Alternative to long-term antithyroid drugs or surgery for Graves' disease.

Non-cancer Use
04 / INDICATION

Diagnostic Whole-body Scan

A low-dose I-131 scan maps all iodine-avid tissue in the body — used before therapeutic dosing to assess residual thyroid tissue and detect metastases, and after treatment to confirm ablation.

Pre-therapy diagnostic scan; post-therapy confirmation scan at day 5–7.

Diagnostic / Staging

What to Expect — Before, During & After RAI

RAI therapy involves careful preparation over several weeks. Proper preparation — especially TSH stimulation and low-iodine diet — is critical to maximising treatment effectiveness.

BEFORE TREATMENT

Preparation Phase

TSH must be elevated (TSH >30 mIU/L) to stimulate iodine uptake by cancer cells. Achieved by either stopping thyroid hormone tablets for 3–4 weeks (hypothyroid withdrawal) or rhTSH injections (Thyrogen) for 2 days — more comfortable and preferred where available.

Low-iodine diet for 2 weeks before treatment — no iodised salt, seafood, dairy, or iodine supplements
TREATMENT DAY

The I-131 Dose

Radioiodine is given as a single oral capsule or liquid — swallowed in a few seconds. The dose is calculated based on risk stratification: low activity (1.1 GBq) for ablation in low-risk disease; higher activities (3.7–7.4 GBq) for high-risk or metastatic disease. Painless and quick.

Hospital admission for 2–5 days required at doses above regulatory thresholds for radiation safety
AFTER TREATMENT

Post-treatment Scan & Follow-up

A whole-body post-treatment scan is performed at day 5–7 — mapping all areas of iodine uptake to confirm ablation and detect any previously unknown metastases. Thyroid hormone replacement is restarted. TSH-suppressed thyroxine therapy then continues long-term to reduce recurrence risk.

Thyroglobulin (Tg) monitoring every 6–12 months is the primary surveillance tool post-RAI

Who Needs RAI? — Risk Stratification

The American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk stratification system guides RAI decisions after surgery. Not all thyroid cancer patients need RAI — the decision depends on tumour size, histology, extrathyroidal extension, and nodal/distant metastases.

ATA Low Risk

RAI Generally Not Required

Intrathyroidal, well-differentiated papillary thyroid cancer. No vascular invasion. No lymph node involvement. Complete surgical resection. No distant metastases.

RAI usually NOT recommended
Examples: PTC <4 cm, intrathyroidal, N0, no aggressive histology, R0 resection.
ATA Intermediate Risk

RAI Recommended — Consider

Minor extrathyroidal extension, aggressive histology (tall cell, columnar), vascular invasion, lymph node metastases (N1b or multiple N1a), or tumour >4 cm.

RAI generally recommended
Examples: PTC with lymph node mets, microscopic extrathyroidal extension, vascular invasion, follicular cancer with minor capsular invasion.
ATA High Risk

RAI Strongly Recommended

Gross extrathyroidal extension, incomplete surgical resection, distant metastases present, post-operative serum thyroglobulin suggestive of distant metastatic disease.

RAI strongly recommended
Examples: T4 disease, M1 (pulmonary or bone metastases), gross ETE, Tg unexpectedly elevated post-surgery.

Radiation Precautions After RAI

After receiving RAI, patients emit low-level radiation and must follow precautions to protect family members and the public — particularly pregnant women and young children.

Duration of precautions depends on the dose given. For standard ablation doses (1.1 GBq), precautions typically last 3–5 days. For higher therapeutic doses, hospital isolation may be required for 2–5 days before precautions at home continue for 1–2 weeks. Your nuclear medicine team will give you a personalised radiation safety card.

Sleep Separately

Sleep alone for the first 3–5 days after treatment. Avoid sharing a bed with your partner or sleeping in the same room as young children.

Limit Contact with Children

Avoid close prolonged contact with children under 5 and pregnant women for 5–10 days. Brief contact (a few minutes) is generally acceptable after the first 1–2 days at standard doses.

Hygiene & Fluids

Drink plenty of fluids to speed iodine excretion in urine. Flush the toilet twice after use. Wash hands frequently. Use separate utensils for the first 2–3 days.

Public Transport & Travel

Avoid prolonged close contact in crowded public spaces for 3–5 days. You can drive your own vehicle. Airport security scanners can detect I-131 for up to 3 months — carry your radiation safety card.

Return to Work

Most patients can return to work within 3–5 days for standard ablation doses, provided the job does not involve close sustained contact with pregnant colleagues or young children.

Pregnancy & Breastfeeding

RAI is absolutely contraindicated in pregnancy. Breastfeeding must be stopped 6–8 weeks before treatment and cannot be resumed for that child. Pregnancy should be deferred for 6–12 months post-RAI.

Side Effects of Radioiodine Therapy

RAI is generally well tolerated. Most side effects are mild and temporary. Late effects are dose-dependent and more relevant with high cumulative doses for metastatic disease.

Nausea

Mild nausea in the first 24 hours after the dose — more common with higher activities. Antiemetics given prophylactically. Usually resolves within a day.

Acute — Day 1–2

Sialadenitis (Salivary Gland Swelling)

Painful swelling and tenderness of the parotid and submandibular glands — from I-131 uptake by salivary gland tissue. Lemon sweets, massage, and hydration reduce risk. Occurs in 10–30%.

Acute — Days 3–7

Dry Mouth (Xerostomia)

Long-term reduction in saliva production from cumulative salivary gland damage. More common with high or repeated doses. Artificial saliva, sialogogues, and good oral hygiene help.

Late — Cumulative Doses

Lacrimal Gland (Eye) Dryness

Dry eyes from lacrimal gland uptake of iodine — less common. Lubricating eye drops help. More likely with higher doses or repeated treatments.

Late — Higher Doses

Radiation Thyroiditis

Temporary swelling and discomfort in the neck from inflammation of residual thyroid tissue or lymph nodes taking up I-131. Usually mild, lasting a few days. NSAIDs or steroids if significant.

Acute — Days 3–10

Bone Marrow Effects

Temporary mild reduction in blood counts — more relevant with very high cumulative doses used for metastatic disease. Monitored with blood tests. Rarely clinically significant at standard ablation doses.

High Cumulative Doses

Hypothyroidism after RAI is expected and treated. After thyroid ablation, patients are placed on lifelong thyroxine (T4) replacement — with TSH kept suppressed in high-risk disease to further reduce recurrence risk. This is a known, planned outcome — not a complication.

Why Thyroid Surgery Determines RAI Success

The effectiveness of radioiodine therapy is directly determined by the completeness and quality of the preceding thyroid surgery. Dr. Gore plans each thyroidectomy with the post-operative RAI strategy already integrated.

  • Total thyroidectomy — removing all normal thyroid — maximises I-131 uptake by residual cancer cells without competition from normal tissue
  • Central neck dissection when indicated — ensures complete nodal clearance before RAI, improving staging accuracy
  • ATA risk stratification post-surgery — guides whether RAI is needed and at what dose
  • Coordination with nuclear medicine physician — communicating operative findings, pathology, and Tg levels to guide RAI planning
  • Managing post-surgical hypocalcaemia — ensuring the patient is stable and calcium-replete before undergoing RAI preparation
  • Surgical salvage for RAI-refractory disease — repeat neck dissection when disease persists or recurs despite RAI treatment
30+
Years of thyroid and head & neck cancer surgery in Pune
TMH
5 years head & neck oncology training — Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai
Total
Total thyroidectomy — the prerequisite for effective RAI ablation
Tg
Post-operative thyroglobulin monitoring coordinated with nuclear medicine team

Frequently Asked Questions

Is radioiodine therapy safe? Will it harm my other organs?
Yes — RAI is considered very safe at standard ablation doses. The beta radiation emitted by I-131 has a range of only 1–2mm, so it destroys thyroid and cancer cells without significant exposure to surrounding organs. The thyroid gland and differentiated thyroid cancer cells are the only tissues that significantly concentrate iodine — all other organs receive only a small, transient radiation dose as iodine passes through.
How long will I need to be isolated after RAI?
For standard ablation doses (1.1 GBq / 30 mCi), hospital admission is typically 2–3 days. After discharge, precautions at home (sleeping separately, limiting contact with children and pregnant women) continue for 3–5 days. For higher therapeutic doses used in metastatic disease, hospital isolation may be longer (up to 5 days) followed by continued home precautions.
Do I have to stop my thyroid tablets before RAI?
TSH must be elevated for RAI to work effectively. This can be achieved by stopping thyroxine tablets for 3–4 weeks (hypothyroid preparation) — which causes temporary symptoms of hypothyroidism including fatigue, weight gain, and brain fog. The alternative is recombinant human TSH injections (Thyrogen) given for 2 days — equally effective and much more comfortable. Dr. Gore and the nuclear medicine team will advise which approach is appropriate for you.
What is a low-iodine diet and how long do I need to follow it?
A low-iodine diet removes iodine from food so that when I-131 is given, thyroid and cancer cells are "iodine-hungry" and absorb it more avidly. The diet involves avoiding iodised salt, seafood, dairy products, eggs, soy, some processed foods, and iodine-containing medications for 2 weeks before RAI. It is restrictive but important for maximising treatment effectiveness.
Can I get pregnant after radioiodine therapy?
Yes — but pregnancy must be deferred for at least 6–12 months after RAI. This allows time for radiation dose to the gonads to dissipate and for thyroid hormone levels to stabilise. Women should use reliable contraception during this period. RAI does not permanently affect fertility, and many patients have healthy pregnancies after treatment. Breastfeeding cannot be resumed for the current child after RAI.
What happens if my thyroid cancer doesn't respond to RAI?
Disease that no longer takes up iodine is called RAI-refractory differentiated thyroid cancer (RAIR-DTC). This occurs in about 5–15% of patients. Options include targeted therapies (Sorafenib, Lenvatinib), redifferentiation strategies to restore iodine uptake, and surgical resection of localised recurrence. Dr. Gore is experienced in surgical management of RAI-refractory and recurrent thyroid cancer.

Questions About Thyroid Cancer or RAI?

If you have been diagnosed with thyroid cancer or advised radioiodine therapy, consult Dr. Gore to understand how surgery and RAI work together — and what the right approach is for your specific cancer.