Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland

Iodine nutrition is commonly assessed from iodine excretion in urine. A 24 h urine sample is ideal, but it is cumbersome and inconvenient. Hence, spot urine samples with creatinine to adjust for differences in void volume are widely used. Still, the importance of ethnicity and the timing of spot uri...

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Published in:British Journal of Nutrition
Main Authors: Andersen, Stig, Waagepetersen, Rasmus, Laurberg, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653
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spelling ftalborgunivpubl:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941 2024-09-15T18:09:40+00:00 Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland Andersen, Stig Waagepetersen, Rasmus Laurberg, Peter 2015 https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941 https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653 eng eng https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Andersen , S , Waagepetersen , R & Laurberg , P 2015 , ' Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland ' , British Journal of Nutrition , vol. 113 , no. 9 , pp. 1433-1440 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653 article 2015 ftalborgunivpubl https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653 2024-07-10T12:45:58Z Iodine nutrition is commonly assessed from iodine excretion in urine. A 24 h urine sample is ideal, but it is cumbersome and inconvenient. Hence, spot urine samples with creatinine to adjust for differences in void volume are widely used. Still, the importance of ethnicity and the timing of spot urine samples need to be settled. We, thus, collected 104 early morning spot urine samples and 24 h urine samples from Inuit and non-Inuit living in Greenland. Diet was assessed by a FFQ. Demographic data were collected from the national registry and by questionnaires. Iodine was measured using the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction, creatinine using the Jaffe method and para-amino benzoic acid by the HPLC method for the estimation of completeness of urine sampling and compensation of incomplete urine samples to 24 h excretion. A population-based recruitment was done from the capital city, a major town and a settlement (n 36/48/20). Participants were seventy-eight Inuit and twenty-six non-Inuit. The median 24 h iodine excretion was 138 (25th-75th percentile 89-225) μg/97 (25th-75th percentile 72-124) μg in Inuit/non-Inuit (P= 0·030), and 153 (25th-75th percentile 97-251) μg/102 (25th-75th percentile 73-138) μg (P= 0·026) when including compensated iodine excretion. Iodine excretion in 24 h urine samples increased with a rising intake of traditional Inuit foods (P= 0·005). Iodine excretion was lower in morning spot urine samples than in 24 h urine samples (P< 0·001). This difference was associated with iodine intake levels (P< 0·001), and was statistically significant when the iodine excretion level was above 150 μg/24 h. In conclusion, the iodine intake level was underestimated from morning spot urine samples if iodine excretion was above the recommended level. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland inuit Aalborg University's Research Portal British Journal of Nutrition 113 9 1433 1440
institution Open Polar
collection Aalborg University's Research Portal
op_collection_id ftalborgunivpubl
language English
description Iodine nutrition is commonly assessed from iodine excretion in urine. A 24 h urine sample is ideal, but it is cumbersome and inconvenient. Hence, spot urine samples with creatinine to adjust for differences in void volume are widely used. Still, the importance of ethnicity and the timing of spot urine samples need to be settled. We, thus, collected 104 early morning spot urine samples and 24 h urine samples from Inuit and non-Inuit living in Greenland. Diet was assessed by a FFQ. Demographic data were collected from the national registry and by questionnaires. Iodine was measured using the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction, creatinine using the Jaffe method and para-amino benzoic acid by the HPLC method for the estimation of completeness of urine sampling and compensation of incomplete urine samples to 24 h excretion. A population-based recruitment was done from the capital city, a major town and a settlement (n 36/48/20). Participants were seventy-eight Inuit and twenty-six non-Inuit. The median 24 h iodine excretion was 138 (25th-75th percentile 89-225) μg/97 (25th-75th percentile 72-124) μg in Inuit/non-Inuit (P= 0·030), and 153 (25th-75th percentile 97-251) μg/102 (25th-75th percentile 73-138) μg (P= 0·026) when including compensated iodine excretion. Iodine excretion in 24 h urine samples increased with a rising intake of traditional Inuit foods (P= 0·005). Iodine excretion was lower in morning spot urine samples than in 24 h urine samples (P< 0·001). This difference was associated with iodine intake levels (P< 0·001), and was statistically significant when the iodine excretion level was above 150 μg/24 h. In conclusion, the iodine intake level was underestimated from morning spot urine samples if iodine excretion was above the recommended level.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Andersen, Stig
Waagepetersen, Rasmus
Laurberg, Peter
spellingShingle Andersen, Stig
Waagepetersen, Rasmus
Laurberg, Peter
Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
author_facet Andersen, Stig
Waagepetersen, Rasmus
Laurberg, Peter
author_sort Andersen, Stig
title Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
title_short Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
title_full Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
title_fullStr Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland
title_sort misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among inuit and non-inuit in greenland
publishDate 2015
url https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653
genre Greenland
inuit
genre_facet Greenland
inuit
op_source Andersen , S , Waagepetersen , R & Laurberg , P 2015 , ' Misclassification of iodine intake level from morning spot urine samples with high iodine excretion among Inuit and non-Inuit in Greenland ' , British Journal of Nutrition , vol. 113 , no. 9 , pp. 1433-1440 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653
op_relation https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/b30e9444-0303-49a3-99dd-fd5999c3d941
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515000653
container_title British Journal of Nutrition
container_volume 113
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1433
op_container_end_page 1440
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