Mallick Ujjal, Newbold Kate, Beasley Matthew, Garcez Kate, Wadsley Jonathan, Johnson Sarah J, Stephenson Tim, Gaze Mark, Goodman Andrew, Jefferies Sarah, Sivabalasingham Suganya, Slevin Nicholas, Wilkinson David P, Macias-Fernandez Elena, Power Danielle, Roques Tom, Speed Lesley, Nutting Christopher, Mochloulis George, Gerrard Georgina, Candish Charles, Morgan Sally, Tripathi Devashish, Truran Peter, Arthur Claire, Wieczorek Andrzej, Madhavan Krishnaswamy, Maclean Jillian, Boote David, Kim Dae, Pascoe Abigail, Pitiyage Gayani, Forsyth Sharon, Ambrose Emily, Chang Elizabeth, Farnell Kate, Hackshaw Allan
Department of Oncology, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle, UK.
Head, Neck and Thyroid Unit, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Lancet. 2025 Jun 18. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(25)00629-4.
Patients with differentiated thyroid cancer can often be treated with postoperative radioiodine (also called radioiodine ablation) after total thyroidectomy. The IoN trial was designed to assess whether recurrence-free survival was non-inferior after no ablation compared with ablation in patients with low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer.
IoN was a multicentre, non-inferiority, phase 3 randomised trial conducted at 33 UK cancer centres. Eligible patients had complete (R0) resection following total thyroidectomy; stage pT1, pT2, pT3 (according to Tumour, Node, Metastasis staging version 7 [TNM7]), or pT3a (according to TNM8) disease; and N0, Nx, or N1a disease. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) by minimisation, using a central electronic system, to have either 1·1 GBq ablation or no ablation, following thyroidectomy. Stratification factors were centre, age, T stage, and nodal status. Patients had annual neck ultrasound scans and 6-monthly serum thyroglobulin measurements. The primary endpoint was 5-year recurrence-free survival, defined by the absence of locoregional recurrent or persistent structural disease, distant metastases, or death from thyroid cancer. Non-inferiority was assessed with a margin of 5 percentage points. Per-protocol and intention-to-treat (ITT) analyses were done for the primary endpoint, and safety was analysed in the per-protocol population. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01398085), ISRCTN (ISRCTN80416929), and EUDRACT (2011-000144-21), and is still in active follow-up.
We recruited 504 patients (including 390 [77%] female patients and 114 [23%] male patients) between June 26, 2012 and March 18, 2020 and randomly assigned 251 to receive no ablation and 253 to receive ablation (ITT population). 249 patients in the no ablation group did not have ablation and 231 in the ablation group had ablation (per-protocol population). Median follow-up was 6·8 years (IQR 5·6-8·6) in the no ablation group and 6·6 years (4·8-8·5) in the ablation group; 17 recurrences (eight in the no ablation group and nine in the ablation group; ITT population) occurred during follow-up. 5-year recurrence-free rates were 97·9% (95% CI 96·1-99·7) in the no ablation group versus 96·3% (93·9-98·7) in the ablation group in the ITT analysis, and 97·9% (96·1-99·7) versus 96·9% (94·7-99·1) in the per-protocol analysis. The 5-year absolute risk difference was 0·5 percentage points (95% CI -2·2 to 3·2, p=0·033; ITT analysis), showing that non-inferiority was reached. The observed recurrence rate was higher among patients with pT3 or pT3a tumours (four [9%] of 46 patients overall with pT3 or pT3a tumours vs 13 [3%] of 458 with pT1 or pT2 tumours), or N1a tumours (six [13%] of 47 with N1a vs 11 [2%] of 457 with N0 or Nx), but they were similar among those who did not receive ablation. Adverse events were similar between the groups, the most common being fatigue (63 [25%] of 249 in the no ablation group vs 65 [28%] of 231 in the ablation group), lethargy (34 [14%] vs 32 [14%]), and dry mouth (24 [10%] vs 21 [9%]), and there were no treatment-related deaths.
The IoN trial shows that ablation (or postoperative radioiodine) can be avoided for patients with pT1, pT2, and N0 or Nx tumours with no adverse features. Many patients with low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer worldwide can safely avoid postoperative radioiodine and its related hospitalisation and side-effects, which in turn results in lower health-care costs.
Cancer Research UK.
分化型甲状腺癌患者在全甲状腺切除术后通常可接受术后放射性碘治疗(也称为放射性碘消融)。IoN试验旨在评估低风险分化型甲状腺癌患者不进行消融与进行消融相比,无复发生存率是否不劣于后者。
IoN是一项在英国33个癌症中心进行的多中心、非劣效性、3期随机试验。符合条件的患者在全甲状腺切除术后实现了完整(R0)切除;疾病分期为pT1、pT2、pT3(根据肿瘤、淋巴结、转移分期第7版[TNM7])或pT3a(根据TNM8);以及N0、Nx或N1a疾病。参与者通过中央电子系统采用最小化法按1:1随机分配,在甲状腺切除术后接受1.1GBq消融或不进行消融。分层因素为中心、年龄、T分期和淋巴结状态。患者每年进行颈部超声扫描,并每6个月测量一次血清甲状腺球蛋白。主要终点为5年无复发生存率,定义为无局部区域复发或持续性结构疾病、远处转移或甲状腺癌死亡。非劣效性评估的界值为5个百分点。对主要终点进行符合方案分析和意向性分析(ITT),并在符合方案人群中分析安全性。该试验已在ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT01398085)、ISRCTN(ISRCTN80416929)和EUDRACT(2011 - 000144 - 21)注册,目前仍在进行积极随访。
2012年6月26日至2020年3月18日期间,我们招募了504例患者(包括390例[77%]女性患者和114例[23%]男性患者),并将251例随机分配至不进行消融组,253例随机分配至消融组(ITT人群)。不进行消融组的249例患者未接受消融,消融组的231例患者接受了消融(符合方案人群)。不进行消融组的中位随访时间为6.8年(IQR 5.6 - 8.6),消融组为6.6年(4.8 - 8.5);随访期间发生了17例复发(不进行消融组8例,消融组9例;ITT人群)。ITT分析中,不进行消融组的5年无复发生存率为97.9%(95%CI 96.1 - 99.7),消融组为96.3%(93.9 - 98.7);符合方案分析中,分别为97.9%(96.1 - 99.7)和96.9%(94.7 - 99.1)。5年绝对风险差异为0.5个百分点(95%CI -2.2至3.2,p = 0.033;ITT分析),表明达到了非劣效性。pT3或pT3a肿瘤患者(pT3或pT3a肿瘤患者共46例中的4例[9%],而pT1或pT2肿瘤患者458例中的13例[3%])或N1a肿瘤患者(N1a肿瘤患者47例中的6例[13%],而N0或Nx肿瘤患者457例中的11例[2%])的观察到的复发率较高,但在未接受消融的患者中复发率相似。两组的不良事件相似,最常见的是疲劳(不进行消融组249例中的63例[25%],消融组231例中的65例[28%])、嗜睡(34例[14%]对32例[14%])和口干(24例[10%]对21例[9%]),且没有与治疗相关的死亡。
IoN试验表明,对于无不良特征的pT1、pT2以及N0或Nx肿瘤患者,可以避免进行消融(或术后放射性碘治疗)。全球许多低风险分化型甲状腺癌患者可以安全地避免术后放射性碘治疗及其相关的住院治疗和副作用,这进而降低了医疗成本。
英国癌症研究基金会。