P4-05-02 - Insufficient iodine status as a consequence of dietary changes

Historically, Iceland has been an iodine sufficient nation due to notably high fish and dairy consumption. Due to this fact the country does not have a strategy related to iodine status, such as fortification of salt. Iodine status of pregnant women has only been assessed once before in Iceland (in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tryggvadottir, Ellen Alma
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Morressier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26226/morressier.5d5e5188bedcf39b76652758
https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/a2a8089e-1ff5-40b6-8852-260e3e1e2981/assets/external_content.pdf
https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/a2a8089e-1ff5-40b6-8852-260e3e1e2981
Description
Summary:Historically, Iceland has been an iodine sufficient nation due to notably high fish and dairy consumption. Due to this fact the country does not have a strategy related to iodine status, such as fortification of salt. Iodine status of pregnant women has only been assessed once before in Iceland (in 2009). The median UIC was found to be 180 u00b5g/L , which was in line with the recommended range of 150-249 u00b5g/L defined by the World Health Organization (WHO). Intake of fish and dairy has decreased considerably in the past 10 years. The aim of the present study was to re-evaluate the iodine status of pregnant women in Iceland using data from the PREWICE study (PREgnant Women in ICEland). Subjects were women (n=983; 73% of the eligible sample) attending their first ultrasound appointment in gestational weeks 11-14 in the period October 2017-March 2018. Spot urine samples were collected for assessment of urinary iodine concentration (UIC) and creatinine. The ratio of iodine to creatinine (I/Cr) was calculated. Diet was assessed using a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ), which provided information on main dietary sources of iodine in the population studied (dairy and fish). The median UIC (95% CI) and I/Cr of the study population was 89 u00b5g/L (42, 141) and 100 (94, 108) u00b5g/g, respectively. UIC increased with higher frequency of dairy intake, ranging from median UIC of 55 (35, 79) u00b5g/L for women consuming dairy products 2 times per day (p for trend <0.001). A small group of women reporting complete avoidance of fish (n=18) had UIC of 50 (21, 123) u00b5g/L and significantly lower I/Cr compared with those who did not report avoidance of fish (58 (34,134) u00b5g/g vs. 100 (94, 108) u00b5g/g, p=0.041). Women taking supplements containing iodine (n=34, 3.5%) had higher UIC compared with those who did not take supplements (141 (77, 263) vs. 87 (82, 94) u00b5g/L, p=0.037. For the first time, insufficient iodine status is being observed in an Icelandic population. There is an urgent need ...