학술논문

Exploration of thyroglobulin as a biomarker of iodine status in iodine-sufficient and mildly iodine-deficient pregnant women.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Nutrition. Aug2023, Vol. 62 Issue 5, p2139-2154. 16p. 1 Diagram, 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*THERAPEUTIC use of iodine
*BIOMARKERS
*KRUSKAL-Wallis Test
*STATISTICS
*MULTIPLE regression analysis
*MATHEMATICAL models
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*PREGNANT women
*DIET
*MANN Whitney U Test
*PREGNANCY complications
*THEORY
*CHI-squared test
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*GLOBULINS
*SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors
*SMOKING
*DATA analysis
*DATA analysis software
*IODINE deficiency
*IODINE
*NUTRITIONAL status
*PREGNANCY
Language
ISSN
1436-6207
Abstract
Purpose: Urinary iodine-to-creatinine ratio (UI/Creat) reflects recent iodine intake but has limitations for assessing habitual intake. Thyroglobulin (Tg) concentration, which increases with thyroid size, appears to be an indicator of longer-term iodine status in children and adults, however, less is known in pregnancy. This study investigated the determinants of serum-Tg in pregnancy and its use as an iodine-status biomarker in settings of iodine-sufficiency and mild-to-moderate deficiency. Methods: Stored blood samples and existing data from pregnant women from the Netherlands-based Generation R (iodine-sufficient) and the Spain-based INMA (mildly-to-moderately iodine-deficient) cohorts were used. Serum-Tg and iodine status (as spot-urine UI/Creat) were measured at median 13 gestational weeks. Using regression models, maternal socio-demographics, diet and iodine-supplement use were investigated as determinants of serum-Tg, as well as the association between UI/Creat and serum-Tg. Results: Median serum-Tg was 11.1 ng/ml in Generation R (n = 3548) and 11.5 ng/ml in INMA (n = 1168). When using 150 µg/g threshold for iodine deficiency, serum-Tg was higher in women with UI/Creat < 150 vs ≥ 150 µg/g (Generation R, 12.0 vs 10.4 ng/ml, P = 0.010; INMA, 12.8 vs 10.4 ng/ml, P < 0.001); after confounder adjustment, serum-Tg was still higher when UI/Creat < 150 µg/g (regression coefficients: Generation R, B = 0.111, P = 0.050; INMA, B = 0.157, P = 0.010). Iodine-supplement use and milk intake were negatively associated with serum-Tg, whereas smoking was positively associated. Conclusion: The association between iodine status and serum-Tg was stronger in the iodine-deficient cohort, than in the iodine-sufficient cohort. Serum-Tg might be a complementary (to UI/Creat) biomarker of iodine status in pregnancy but further evidence is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]