Erika Abelleira
University of Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Erika Abelleira.
Thyroid | 2013
Fabián Pitoia; Fernanda Bueno; Carolina Urciuoli; Erika Abelleira; Graciela Cross; R. Michael Tuttle
OBJECTIVES The aims of this study were to validate the proposed Latin American Thyroid Society (LATS) risk of recurrence stratification system and to compare the findings with those of the American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk of recurrence stratification system. SUBJECTS AND METHODS This study is a retrospective review of papillary thyroid cancer patients treated with total thyroidectomy and radioactive iodine at a single experienced thyroid cancer center and followed according to the LATS management guidelines. Each patient was risk-stratified using both the LATS and ATA staging systems. The primary endpoints were (i) the best response to initial therapy defined as either remission (stimulated thyroglobulin [Tg] <1 ng/mL, negative ultrasonography) or persistent disease (biochemical and/or structural), and (ii) clinical status at final follow-up defined as no evidence of disease (suppressed Tg <1 ng/mL, negative ultrasonography), biochemical persistent disease (suppressed Tg >1 ng/mL in the absence of structural disease), structural persistent disease (locoregional or distant metastases), or recurrence (biochemical or structural disease identified after a period of no evidence of disease). RESULTS One hundred seventy-one papillary thyroid cancer patients were included (mean age 45 ± 16 years, followed for a median of 4 years after initial treatment). Both the ATA and LATS risk stratification systems provided clinically meaningful graded estimates with regard to (i) the likelihood of achieving remission in response to initial therapy, (ii) the likelihood of having persistent structural disease in response to initial therapy and at final follow-up, (iii) the likely locations of the persistent structural disease (locoregional vs. distant metastases), (iv) the likelihood of recurrence, and (v) the likelihood of being no evidence of disease at final follow-up. The likelihood of having persistent biochemical evidence of disease was not significantly different across the staging categories. CONCLUSIONS Both the ATA and LATS risk of recurrence systems effectively risk-stratify patients with regard to multiple important clinical outcomes. When used in conjunction with a staging system that predicts disease-specific mortality, either of these systems can be used to guide risk-adapted individualized initial management recommendations.
Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2011
Fabián Pitoia; Graciela Cross; María E. Salvai; Erika Abelleira; Hugo Niepomniszcze
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine whether familial non-medullary thyroid cancer (FNMTC) is more aggressive than sporadic thyroid cancer. SUBJECTS AND METHODS We compared the clinical behavior and outcome of 16 subjects with FNMTC from 7 unrelated kindred with those observed in 160 subjects with sporadic PTC (SPTC) from our database. RESULTS The only different baseline characteristics observed between both groups were: bilateral malignancy, 38% vs. 24%, respectively (p = 0.03), and lymph node metastasis, 56.2% vs. 39%, respectively (p = 0.01). Considering the outcome, in the FNMTC, 9 (56.2%) patients were rendered free of disease, one patient died from thyroid cancer (6%), and 6/16 (37.5%) had persistent disease. In the SPTC Group, 87 (54%) patients were considered free of disease, 11 (7%) died due to PTC, and 62 (38%) had persistent disease (p = ns). CONCLUSIONS Despite the higher incidence of lymph node metastasis in FNMTC patients this situation seemed not to alter the compared outcome.
Journal of Thyroid Research | 2012
Fabián Pitoia; Robert J. Marlowe; Erika Abelleira; Eduardo Néstor Faure; Fernanda Bueno; Diego Schwarzstein; Rubén Julio Lutfi; Hugo Niepomniszcze
To supplement limited relevant literature, we retrospectively compared ablation and disease outcomes in high-risk differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) patients undergoing radioiodine thyroid remnant ablation aided by recombinant human thyrotropin (rhTSH) versus thyroid hormone withdrawal/withholding (THW). Our cohort was 45 consecutive antithyroglobulin antibody- (TgAb-) negative, T3-T4/N0-N1-Nx/M0 adults ablated with high activities at three referral centers. Ablation success comprised negative (<1 μg/L) stimulated serum thyroglobulin (Tg) and TgAb, with absent or <0.1% scintigraphic thyroid bed uptake. “No evidence of disease” (NED) comprised negative unstimulated/stimulated Tg and no suspicious neck ultrasonography or pathological imaging or biopsy. “Persistent disease” was failure to achieve NED, “recurrence,” loss of NED status. rhTSH patients (n = 18) were oftener ≥45 years old and higher stage (P = 0.01), but otherwise not different than THW patients (n = 27) at baseline. rhTSH patients were significantly oftener successfully ablated compared to THW patients (83% versus 67%, P < 0.02). After respective 3.3 yr and 4.5 yr mean follow-ups (P = 0.02), NED was achieved oftener (72% versus 59%) and persistent disease was less frequent in rhTSH patients (22% versus 33%) (both comparisons P = 0.03). rhTSH stimulation is associated with at least as good outcomes as is THW in ablation of high-risk DTC patients.
Endocrine | 2017
Fabián Pitoia; Erika Abelleira; Graciela Cross
The objective of our study was to evaluate the prognostic value of stimulated thyroglobulin levels at the moment of remnant ablation for predicting an initial excellent or a structural incomplete response to treatment according to the risk of recurrence in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer. Patients were divided into two groups according to the preparation mode for remnant ablation (thyroid hormone withdrawal or recombinant human TSH). We included 219 patients followed-up for at least for 24 months after remnant ablation. The primary endpoint was the best response to initial therapy assessed in the first 9–18 months of follow-up. An excellent response was observed in 45.1 % of patients prepared after recombinant human TSH compared to 44.6 % of patients prepared after thyroid hormone withdrawal (P = NS). The cutoff value of thyroglobulin level after recombinant human TSH for predicting an excellent response was 8 ng/ml (n = 51), with a sensitivity of 73.9 %, and a positive predictive value of 61 %. It was similar for patients with low vs. intermediate to high risk of recurrence. This cutoff value for thyroglobulin level after thyroid hormone withdrawal was 22 ng/ml (n = 168), with a sensitivity of 94.7 % and a positive predictive value of 61.7 %. In the thyroid hormone withdrawal group the thyroglobulin cutoff level was 12 ng/ml for low-risk patients compared to 16 ng/ml for those with intermediate to high risk of recurrence (P = 0.003). The cutoff value of the thyroglobulin level for predicting a structural incomplete response to initial treatment was 20 ng/ml after rhTSH, with a negative predictive value of 91.4 %. This level was higher in thyroid hormone withdrawal group, and it was established at 25 ng/ml, with a negative predictive value of 97.7 %. The stimulated Tg level seems to be different depending on the preparation mode (rhTSH or THW) for RA. It has a high NPV to predict the absence of a structural incomplete response and it is also a good predictor of the initial excellent response and the NED status at the end of follow-up.
Archives of Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015
Fabián Pitoia; Erika Abelleira; Fernando Jerkovich; Carolina Urciuoli; Graciela Cross
Advanced radioactive refractory and progressive or symptomatic differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) is a rare condition. Sorafenib was recently approved for the treatment of these patients. We present the case of a 67 year old woman diagnosed with DTC who underwent a total thyroidectomy with central, lateral-compartment neck dissection and shaving of the trachea and esophagus due to tumor infiltration. A local recurrence was detected 14 months later requiring, additionally, two tracheal rings resection. The patient received a cumulative 131I dose of 650 mCi and developed dysphagia and dyspnea 63 months after initial surgery. A 18FGD-PET/CT showed progression of the local mass associated to hypermetabolic pulmonary nodules. Sorafenib 800 mg/day was then prescribed. A dose reduction to 400 mg/day was necessary due to grade 3 thrombocytopenia that appeared four months after drug prescription. Platelet count went to normal after this dose reduction. Five months after initiation of sorafenib, a partial response of the local mass with significant intra-tumoral necrosis was observed. We conclude that sorafenib is a valid option for locally advanced DTC and that the platelet count should be evaluated regularly because it seems that thrombocytopenia might be more frequently observed in DTC than in other types of tumors.
European thyroid journal | 2014
Fabián Pitoia; Erika Abelleira; Graciela Cross
It has already been shown that remnant ablation in patients with thyroid cancer and lymph node (LN) metastases has similar results when patients are prepared after recombinant human thyroid-stimulating hormone (rhTSH) therapy or thyroid hormone withdrawal (THW). Due to the current changes in the risk-of-recurrence classifications, we decided to evaluate the initial response to treatment and the outcome at medium-term follow-up in 40 consecutive patients with clinically relevant lymph nodes who received radioiodine remnant ablation after rhTSH therapy (n = 20) or THW (n = 20). Each patient received either 100 or 150 mCi 131-I for ablation based on TNM status, and the mean amounts of 131-I used in the 2 groups were not significantly different. An excellent response to treatment was observed in 45% of the patients prepared after rhTSH therapy compared to 20% of those prepared after THW (p = 0.08). Three patients (2 in the THW group and 1 in the rhTSH group) who had N1a in the initial surgery presented with structural persistence as an initial response to treatment. One patient in the THW group had a follow-up of the persistent disease with no surgical treatment, and 2 others received a lateral LN dissection. When the status at final follow-up was considered (median follow-up 3.3 years, range 3-4.2), 60% of the patients ablated after rhTSH therapy were considered with no evidence of disease, compared to 30% of those who underwent THW. The frequency of structural persistence (metastatic LN) was similar in the 2 groups (15 vs. 25%), and the distribution of the responses at final follow-up was not statistically significantly different (p = 0.12). We conclude that preparation after rhTSH therapy seems to be as effective as after THW for patients with clinically relevant LN metastases.
European thyroid journal | 2014
Johannes Järhult; Ramtin Vedad; Tiziana de Filippis; Federica Marelli; Maria Cristina Vigone; Marianna Di Frenna; Giovanna Weber; Luca Persani; Mafalda Marcelino; Pedro Marques; Luís M. B. Lopes; Valeriano Leite; João Jácome de Castro; Nadine Johnson; Vikash Chatrani; Anna-Kay Taylor-Christmas; Eric Choo-Kang; Monica Smikle; Wright-Pascoe R; Karen Phillips; Marvin Reid; Christophe Ghys; Elçin Ozalp; Michel Depierreux; Brigitte Velkeniers; Sita Virakul; Leendert van Steensel; Virgil A.S.H. Dalm; Dion Paridaens; P. Martin van Hagen
Maria Alevizaki, Athens Ana Aranda, Madrid Rebecca Bahn, Rochester, Minn. Paul Banga, London Luigi Bartalena, Varese Bernadette Biondi, Naples Anita Boelen, Amsterdam Georg Brabant, Lübeck Henning Dralle, Halle Creswell J. Eastman, Westmead, N.S.W. Murat Erdogan, Ankara Valentin Fadeyev, Moscow Ulla Feldt-Rasmussen, Copenhagen Laszlo Hegedus, Odense George J. Kahaly, Mainz Rui Maciel, São Paolo Ana Luiza Maia, Porto Alegre Jens Mittag, Stockholm Ralf Paschke, Leipzig Simon Pearce, Newcastle-upon-Tyne Robin Peeters, Rotterdam Kris Poppe, Bruxelles Samuel Refetoff , Chicago, Ill. Jacques Samarut, Lyon Pilar Santisteban, Madrid YoungKee Shong, Seoul Jan Smit, Leiden Weiping Teng, Shenyang Mark Vanderpump, London Th eo Visser, Rotterdam Paolo Vitti, Pisa Graham Williams, London Shunichi Yamashita, Nagasaki Mariastella Zannini, Naples Luca Persani, Milan (Translational Th yroidology)
Endocrine | 2014
Fabián Pitoia; Erika Abelleira; Hernán Tala; Fernanda Bueno; Carolina Urciuoli; Graciela Cross
Endocrine | 2015
Fabián Pitoia; Erika Abelleira; Fernanda Bueno; Carolina Urciuoli; Angelica Schmidt; Hugo Niepomniszcze
Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2013
Fabián Pitoia; Maria F. Bueno; Erika Abelleira; María E. Salvai; Liliana Bergoglio; Markus Luster; Hugo Niepomniszcze