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Iodine deficiency in pregnant women and neonates in Thailand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 December 2007

Rajata Rajatanavin*
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10400, Thailand
*
*Corresponding author: Email rarrv@mahidol.ac.th
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Abstract

Objective: To present data on the relationship between the concentration of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in whole blood or serum from neonates and the concentration of iodine in their mother's urine collected at birth to contribute to the contention that the recommended iodine intake during pregnancy should be increased.

Design and Setting: Data were provided by current programmes of neonatal screening of congenital hypothyroidism in Bangkok and rural areas of Thailand.

Subjects: A total of 5144 cord serum samples were collected in 2003 and measured for TSH concentrations. Paired samples of blood and urine were collected in 2000 from 203 infants and their mothers and from 1182 infant-mother pairs in 2002-03 in six rural provinces. Iodine was measured in the urine and TSH was measured in cord serum.

Results: The urinary iodine concentration of mothers in rural Thailand is adequate, with a median of 103 μg l-1. However, in 2000, the median urinary iodine concentration of mothers in Bangkok was only 85 μg l-1. The concentration of TSH in whole blood collected on filter paper from neonates was not sensitive enough to be used as a monitoring tool for iodine nutrition in the neonates, as there was no relationship with the concentration of iodine in the urine of the children's mothers. This was in contrast to the concentration of TSH in serum collected from cord blood.

Conclusions: Several conclusions were drawn from this data: 1) Neonatal TSH screening using whole blood collected from a heel prick at 3 days of age is not sensitive enough to assess the iodine nutrition of neonates; 2) Neonatal TSH screening using cord sera can be used to assess iodine nutrition in neonates; 3) The optimum median maternal urinary iodine concentration in Thailand appears to be 103 μg l-1; 4) The criteria proposed by WHO, UNICEF, and ICCIDD to assess iodine nutrition using data on neonatal TSH concentrations should be reassessed; and 5) Neonatal TSH screening can be effectively performed by collecting cord serum in district hospitals in Thailand.

Information

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2007
Figure 0

Table 1 The changes in goitre rate in schoolchildren in five districts of Nan Province, Thailand 4 years after iodine supplementation. Also shown are the changes in the odds ratio among neonates in the same districts of having a thyroid-stimulating hormone concentration greater than neonates in Bangkok.

Figure 1

Table 2 Classification of the concentration of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in cord serum samples collected from 5114 neonates in Ramathibodi Hospital, Bangkok in 2003. The intervals are derived from reference 6.

Figure 2

Fig. 1 A scatter plot of the urinary iodine concentration of mothers and the cord serum concentration of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) from their neonates collected from 203 mother–infant pairs at Ramathibodi Hospital, Bangkok in 2000.

Figure 3

Fig. 2 The percentage of cord serum samples from neonates with TSH concentrations >11.2 mIU l− 1, according to the concentration of iodine in the urine of paired samples from mothers.

Figure 4

Fig. 3 A scatter plot of the urinary iodine concentration of mothers and the whole blood concentration of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) from their neonates collected from 1182 mother–infant pairs in Thailand in 2002–03.

Figure 5

Fig. 4 The percentage of whole blood samples from neonates with a TSH concentration >11.2 mIU l− 1 according to the concentration of iodine in the urine of paired samples from mothers.

Figure 6

Table 3 The median concentration of urinary iodine of mothers at delivery derived from periodic monitoring in 15 provinces in four regions of Thailand each year between 2000 and 2003. The data are from the Department of Health, Ministry of Public Health.

Figure 7

Table 4 The odds ratio among 203 neonates born at Ramathibodi Hospital, Bangkok in 2000 of having a serum TSH concentration higher than 19.6 mIU l−1 when the mothers urinary iodine concentration was <103 μg l−1, which was the median urinary iodine concentration among 1189 rural Thai mothers.

Figure 8

Table 5 The median (95% CI) concentration of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in neonates born in 1998 and 2003 in Dansai district, Loie Province, northern Thailand, and the values for neonates in Bangkok in 1994. The median urinary maternal iodine concentration of mothers in Dansai in both years were in the normal range, while the concentration of women in Bangkok was in the range of mild iodine deficiency.