Theranostics Basics
Radioisotopes
Clinical Applications
Informed Consent
Vocabulary
100

This term describes the use of radioactive compounds for both imaging and treating disease in nuclear medicine.

What is theranostics?

100

This radioisotope is a dual beta- and gamma-emitter, primarily used for both therapy and diagnostic scanning in thyroid cancer.

What is Iodine-131?

100

This imaging technique uses 68Ga-labeled analogs to improve diagnosis and staging of neuroendocrine tumors.

What is Somatostatin Receptor (SSTR) PET?

100

This process ensures patients make voluntary, educated decisions about their medical care.

What is informed consent?

100

This phenomenon describes the shrinkage of distant metastases after local radiation treatment.

What is the abscopal effect?

200

Paul Ehrlich's concept of a drug that targets diseased cells without harming healthy ones is called this.

What is the "magic bullet"?

200

This positron-emitting isotope is used in PET imaging for high-resolution dosimetry studies in thyroid cancer.

What is Iodine-124?

200

This theranostic approach delivers radioactive microspheres to liver tumors via arterial vasculature.

What is hepatic radioembolization?

200

Physicians must explain these potential outcomes if a patient refuses a radiation oncology procedure.

What are the consequences of refusal?

200

This imaging technique combines PET or SPECT with CT to provide both functional and anatomical information.

What is hybrid imaging?

300

The primary goal of theranostics in nuclear medicine is to provide this type of customized healthcare.

What is precision oncology?

300

This alpha-particle emitting isotope is used to treat bone metastases from prostate cancer, improving survival and reducing pain.

What is Radium-223 (223Ra)?

300

PSMA PET is highly effective for this type of prostate cancer due to its sensitivity in detecting small lesions.

What is metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC)?

300

This standard determines the level of detail a physician must disclose, based on what a typical person would want to know.

What is the reasonable person standard?

300

This side effect, also known as dry mouth, is a dose-limiting toxicity in some theranostic treatments.

What is xerostomia?

400

This type of radiation, emitted by isotopes like Iodine-131, is used for therapeutic treatment by delivering cytotoxic energy to diseased tissues.

What are alpha or beta particles?

400

This beta-particle emitting isotope is paired with Copper-64 for therapeutic applications in theranostics.

What is Copper-67 (67Cu)?

400

This radiopharmaceutical, labeled with Iodine-131, targets neural crest-derived tumors like neuroblastoma.

What is Metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG)?

400

This exception allows a physician to withhold information if it could cause a substantial adverse impact on a patient’s health.

What is therapeutic privilege?

400

This term refers to differences in phenotypes and genotypes within a tumor, impacting treatment response.

What is tumor heterogeneity?

500

This classic theranostic system, using radioiodine, was the first successful example for treating differentiated thyroid cancer.

What is Iodine-131-based diagnosis and therapy?

500

This isotope, often used with somatostatin analogs like DOTATATE, is a beta-emitter for treating neuroendocrine tumors.

What is Lutetium-177 (177Lu)?

500

Bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals like 153Sm-EDTMP target this component in metastatic bone lesions to alleviate pain.

What are hydroxyapatite crystals?

500

This patient right allows them to request not to be fully informed of certain risks or facts.

What is patient declination?

500

This cancer cell behavior, targeted by FDG PET, involves preferential use of aerobic glycolysis for energy.

What is the Warburg effect?