Background: Sorafenib has shown promise in the treatment of patients with advanced or metastatic thyroid carcinoma. However, its therapeutic effect has not been assessed in patients with brain metastases from follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC). Here, we report a patient in whom this treatment was employed with a relatively favorable response.
Patient and methods: A 56-year-old woman had a thyroidectomy 8 years previously for FTC. She subsequently developed lung metastases, for which she received seven courses of radioiodine ((131)I) therapy. She developed right hemiplegia and other symptoms and was found to have a ≈ 5-cm lesion in the left parietal lobe. Radiosurgery with a total dose of 28 Gy (7 Gy/day, for 4 days) to treat her brain metastatic lesion was ineffective, and she was referred to us. We treated her with sorafenib, 200 mg orally, on a twice-daily basis. The effect of this intervention was assessed clinically and radiographically using Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST).
Summary: Symptoms and signs improved dramatically and continuously after initiation of sorafenib treatment. Partial response (PR) in the brain metastasis and stable disease (SD) in lung metastatic lesions were verified by consecutive imaging findings for more than one year. Despite alopecia, other treatment-related adverse events did not occur.
Conclusions: Targeted therapy such as with sorafenib could be an effective alternative therapeutic strategy in the treatment of progressive brain metastasis from differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) when surgery, external beam radiation, and (131)I are not suitable or give poor outcomes. A paradigm of sustained low dose of sorafenib (200 mg,twice a day) may be well-tolerated without compromising maintenance of the therapeutic effect.