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Search results for biotin in Standardized Name (approximate match)
Status:
Investigational
Source:
INN:iodine (¹³¹I) derlotuximab biotin [INN]
Source URL:
Class:
PROTEIN
Iodide I-131 (as Sodium iodide I-131) is a radioisotopic drug used for the treatment and palliation of thyroid malignancy. Iodine-131 is notable for causing mutation and death in cells that it penetrates, which is due to its mode of beta decay. Iodide I-131 can be detected by gamma cameras for diagnostic imaging, however, it is rarely administered for diagnostic purposes only, imaging will normally be done following a therapeutic dose. Major uses of 131I include the treatment of thyrotoxicosis (hyperthyroidism) due to Graves' disease, and sometimes hyperactive thyroid nodules (abnormally active thyroid tissue that is not malignant). Iodine-131, in higher doses than for thyrotoxicosis, is used for ablation of remnant thyroid tissue following a complete thyroidectomy to treat thyroid cancer. The 131I isotope is also used as a radioactive label for certain radiopharmaceuticals that can be used for therapy, e.g. 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine for imaging and treating pheochromocytoma and neuroblastoma. Because of the carcinogenicity of its beta radiation in the thyroid in small doses, I-131 is rarely used primarily or solely for diagnosis. Instead, the more purely gamma-emitting radioiodine iodine-123 is used in diagnostic testing. The longer half-lived iodine-125 is also occasionally used when a longer half-life radioiodine is needed for diagnosis, and in brachytherapy treatment, where the low-energy gamma radiation without a beta component makes iodine-125 useful.