| Literature DB >> 28215480 |
Rehman Mehmood Khattak1, Muhammad Nasir Khan Khattak2, Till Ittermann3, Henry Völzke4.
Abstract
Iodine deficiency remains a considerable challenge worldwide, even after decades of efforts to address the problem. The aim of this review is to present the current situation in historically iodine-deficient Pakistan regarding iodine nutritional status and place it in a global perspective. We collected relevant articles from online bibliographic databases and websites of concerned organizations that addressed prevalence of goiter/iodine deficiency and barriers to sustainable control. We divided the studies into pre- and post-1994, a landmark year when Pakistan formally adopted the universal salt iodization (USI) programme. Overall, 56 studies reported goiter/iodine deficiency prevalence in Pakistan. Before 1994, six studies (30%) reported a goiter prevalence ≥70%, while nine studies (45%) reported a goiter prevalence between 30% and 70%. Only five studies (25%) found a goiter prevalence less than 30%, of which only two studies reported prevalence <10%. From 1994 onwards, 15 studies (41.7%) reported a goiter/iodine deficiency (ID) prevalence ≥50%, of which seven studies reported prevalence ≥70%, while three studies (8.3%) found a goiter prevalence of 30%-49%, nine studies (25%) found a goiter prevalence of 10%-29%, and five studies (13.9%) reported prevalence of <10%. Four studies (11.1%) reported lower goiter prevalence but higher prevalence of iodine deficiency. The efforts in the past two decades resulted in up to a 50% decline in iodine deficiency disorders (IDD). Variable remaining factors and the recent results, however, indicate that this decline may be non-uniform and even over-estimated. Coordinated and regionally adopted efforts for eradication of IDD from all stakeholders should be pursued. Policy makers should take steps to protect future generations and alert concerned organizations about the importance of careful assessments and estimates of iodine nutritional status.Entities:
Keywords: Goiter prevalence; Iodine deficiency disorder; Iodine nutritional status; Pakistan; Salt iodization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28215480 PMCID: PMC5463024 DOI: 10.1016/j.je.2016.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol ISSN: 0917-5040 Impact factor: 3.211
Studies representing prevalence of goiter before 1994.
| Year of study | District/region | Total goiter prevalence (%) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAC | Whole population | |||
| 1908 | Gilgit and Chitral | ─ | 80 | |
| 1927 | Dainyor (Gilgit) | 65 | ||
| 1955–56 | Multan | 52.2 (41.3♂, 72.3♀) | ||
| 1960 | Chitral | 72 | ||
| 1960 | Gilgit | 76 | ─ | |
| 1972 | Dainyor (Gilgit) | 74 | ─ | |
| 1974 | Maroi (Chitral) | 31♂, 28♀ | ||
| 1978 | Shigar, Baltistan | 72 | 61 Adolescents | |
| 1979–82 | Multan | ─ | 4.43 (3.6♂, 6.07♀) | |
| 1980 | Shigar, Baltistan | ─ | 77 | |
| 1981 | Kalam (Swat) | ─ | 21.18 | |
| 1981–86 | Gilgit, Baltistan | ─ | 34.3♂,49.3♀ | |
| 1987 | Islamabad | 40 | ─ | |
| 1988 | Mardan | 8.8 | 26.95 | |
| 1988 | Swat | 37.21 | ─ | |
| 1989 | Hazara | 71 | ─ | |
| 1990 | Murree | 47.4 (47.9♀, 46.5♂) | ─ | |
| 1990 | Gilgit | 33.3 | ─ | |
| 1990 | Lotkoh (Chitral) | 12 | ─ | |
| 1992 | Gilgit, Hunza | ─ | 4.68 | |
SAC, School-age children.
These values are overall percentage averages for the prevalence in the age groups ≥21, 11–12, and 0–10 years (females: 55%, 63%, and 31%; males: 85%, 73%, and 28%, respectively).
Studies representing prevalence of goiter from 1994 onward.
| Punjab | KP | Sindh | GB | AJK | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region/year | SP | GP/ID (%) | Region/year | SP | GP/ID (%) | Region/year | SP | GP/ID (%) | Region/year | SP | GP/ID (%) | Region/year | SP | GP/ID (%) |
| Punjab | ─ | 81 | Swat | 728 | 59.2 | Sindh | ─ | ─ | Gilgit | ─ | 22.2 | AJK | – | 28 |
| Rawalpindi | 210 | 9.5 | Abbotabad | 1628 | 23.9/35.7 | Banbhore, MK | 1028 | 0.3 BI | Gilgit | ─ | 34 | Bagh | 675 | 3.0 |
| Lahore | 1295 | 13.5 | Swat | ─ | 70 | MKK | 485 | 52 | Ghanche | 120 | 100 | AJK | 65 | 65.4 |
| Punjab | ─ | 21 | Swat | 960 | 52♂,45♀ | Sindh | 307 | 35.0 | Hunza | 2550 | 0.47 | AJK | 100 | 20 |
| Lahore | 350 | 60.6 | Pehawar | ─ | 20 | Hyderabad | 50 | 30.5 | Gilgit | 150 | 27.6 BI | |||
| Rawalpindi | 369 | 52 | KP | ─ | 27 | Sindh | 40 | GB | 29 | 70.0 | ||||
| Rawalpindi | 508 | 57.09 | Karak | 1426 | 47 | |||||||||
| Lahore | 660 | 8.8 | Pehawar | ─ | 53/45.08 | |||||||||
| Lahore | 254 | 31.8/79.5 | Peshawar | 122 | 53.27 | |||||||||
| Lahore | 110 | 100 | KP20 2011 | 162 | 26.0 | |||||||||
| PakPattan | 200 | 80 | Charsadda | 1210 | 15.8/54.7 | |||||||||
| PakPattan | 2335 | 28.7 | Karak | 1194 | 14.5/87.3 | |||||||||
| Punjab | 585 | 39.3 | Kohat | 1170 | 35/92.7 | |||||||||
| Lahore | 293 | 24.5 | Peshawar | 251 | 14.8 | |||||||||
KPK, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa; GB, Gilgit Baltistan; AJK, Azad Jammu and Kashmir; SP, study population; GP, goiter prevalence; ID, iodine deficiency; BI, before intervention; AI, after intervention; MK, Mirpur Khas; MKK, Matiari, Khairpur, Karachi; SAC, school age children; PW, pregnant women.
Iodine deficiency percentage.
Fig. 1Map of Pakistan showing potential natural factors influencing iodine deficiency and goiter prevalence/iodine deficiency across the country (1908–2015). No reports from Balochistan, FATA, AJK regarding prevalence of goiter, except the results of the 2011 national nutrition survey, and only a few studies conducted in Sindh province.
WHO recommended indicators for the assessment of iodine status.
| Indicator | Iodine intake | Excessive | More than adequate | Adequate | Mild | Moderate | Severe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iodine status | Risk of adverse health consequences | Above requirements | Sufficient | Insufficient | |||
| Total goiter rate (TGR) (%) | 0–4.9 | 5–19.9 | 20–29.9 | 30 or more | |||
| MUIC | ≥300 | 200–299 | 100–199 | 50–99 | 20–49 | ≤20 | |
| MUIC Pregnant women (μg/L) | ≥500 | 250–499 | 150–249 | ≤150 | |||
| MUIC Lactating women and children under 2 years (μg/L) | ≥100 | ≤100 | |||||
| Salt coverage (countries or areas within the country) (%) | ≥90 | 50–90 | 20–50 | ≤20 | |||
The term “excessive” means in excess of the amount required to prevent and control iodine deficiency.
Applies to adults, but not to pregnant and lactating women.
Median urinary iodine concentration.
School age children.
Role of the organizations working for the elimination of iodine deficiency disorder in Pakistan.
| Name of organization | Role in IDD prevention program |
|---|---|
| UNICEF | Focuses on advocacy, demand generation, monitoring and legislation |
| Micronutrient Initiative | Supports salt iodization program implementation through financial and technical assistance to salt producers, government, and departments of health |
| World Food Program (WFP) | Provides funding for IDD prevention program |
| WHO | Provides funding, recommendations, standards, and protocols |
| Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) | Focuses on the supply and quality of iodized salt production, monitoring, and evaluation |
| World Bank | Provides funding for the IDD prevention program |
| Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation | Provides funding for the GAIN-UNICEF partnership project in 16 countries including Pakistan |
| South East Asia Iodine Deficiency Disorders Elimination Action Group (SEA-IDDEA) | Reviews the status of USI, looking for constraints and remedies and partners for action against IDD |
| The Nutrition Wing of the Ministry of Health | Provides overall policy formulation, strategy approval, monitoring and supervision of program implementation, quality control and regulatory enforcement of the salt processors in their respective areas |
| Pakistan Standard and Quality Control Authority | Works on quality control and quality assurance, helps in development of internal and external monitoring protocols, with assistance of DoH, Micronutrient Initiative, UNICEF |