Surveys in Areas of High Risk of Iodine Deficiency and Iodine Excess in China, 2012-2014: Current Status and Examination of the Relationship between Urinary Iodine Concentration and Goiter Prevalence in Children Aged 8-10 Years.
- Author:
Si Lu CUI
1
;
Peng LIU
1
;
Xiao Hui SU
1
;
Shou Jun LIU
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: Endemic goiter; High iodine; Iodine deficiency
- MeSH: Child; China; epidemiology; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Goiter; epidemiology; Humans; Iodine; administration & dosage; deficiency; urine; Male; Prevalence; Risk Factors
- From: Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2017;30(2):88-96
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVEWe aimed to evaluate goiter prevalence and iodine nutritional status in areas with high levels of water iodine; to monitor the prevalence of iodine deficiency disorders (IDD) in areas at high risk of IDD; and to compare the prevalence of goiter and urine iodine (UI) concentrations between children living in the two areas.
METHODSBased on surveillance from 2012-2014, we analyzed the concentration of UI and prevalence of goiter in 8-10-year-old children from 12 high-risk IDD provinces, and from 8 provinces and municipalities with excessive water iodine. We calculated goiter prevalence for each UI level according to World Health Organization (WHO) standards and constructed predictive prevalence curves.
RESULTSThe goiter prevalence and median UI of children from areas with high water iodine were not optimal, being above the WHO standards (5% and 100-199 μg/L, respectively), whereas those in high-risk areas fell within the standard. UI and goiter prevalence exhibited a U-shaped relationship in high-risk endemic areas and a parabolic relationship in areas of iodine excess.
CONCLUSIONIodine surplus in high-iodine areas leads to high goiter prevalence and UI. However, in high-risk areas, UI was optimal and goiter prevalence met the national criteria for IDD elimination.