Literature DB >> 18042176

Influence of iodine on the reference interval of TSH and the optimal interval of TSH: results of a follow-up study in areas with different iodine intakes.

Haixia Guan1, Zhongyan Shan, Xiaochun Teng, Yushu Li, Di Teng, Ying Jin, Xiaohui Yu, Chenling Fan, Wei Chong, Fan Yang, Hong Dai, Yang Yu, Jia Li, Yanyan Chen, Dong Zhao, Xiaoguang Shi, Fengnan Hu, Jinyuan Mao, Xiaolan Gu, Rong Yang, Wei Chen, Yajie Tong, Weibo Wang, Tianshu Gao, Chenyang Li, Weiping Teng.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the status of iodine nutrition influences the TSH concentration in a selected Chinese reference population according to the criteria proposed by National Academy of Clinical Biochemistry (NACB) and regular thyroid ultrasonography, to establish a new reference interval of TSH based on the wide variation of iodine nutrition in populations, and to identify an optimal interval of TSH by following up the cohort with normal TSH concentrations at baseline.
DESIGN: The study was conducted in Panshan, Zhangwu and Huanghua, the regions with mildly deficient, more than adequate and excessive iodine intake, respectively. Of the 3761 unselected subjects who were enrolled at baseline, 2237 met the criteria for a reference population. Of 3048 subjects with normal serum TSH at baseline, 2727 (80.0%) participated in the 5-year follow-up study. TSH and thyroid autoantibodies in serum and iodine in urine were measured, and B-mode ultrasonography of the thyroid was performed.
RESULTS: In the reference population, there was a urinary iodine-related increment of serum TSH levels (r = 0.21, P = 0.000), and the mean levels of TSH in Panshan, Zhangwu and Huanghua were 1.15, 1.28 and 1.93 mIU/l, respectively (P = 0.000), corresponding to the rising regional iodine intake. Based on the overall data, we obtained a reference interval of 0.3-4.8 mIU/l. TSH concentrations obtained in the follow-up study correlated well with those at baseline (r = 0.58, P = 0.000). A baseline serum TSH > 1.9 mIU/l was associated with an increased incidence of development of supranormal TSH and a baseline serum TSH < 1.0 mIU/l was associated with an increased incidence of subnormal TSH development.
CONCLUSIONS: Iodine nutrition is an important factor associated with TSH concentration even in the rigorously selected reference population. Baseline TSH of 1.0-1.9 mIU/l is an optimal interval with the lowest incidence of abnormal TSH in 5 years.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18042176     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2265.2007.03150.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Endocrinol (Oxf)        ISSN: 0300-0664            Impact factor:   3.478


  20 in total

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