| Literature DB >> 32486114 |
Elizabeth R Eveleigh1, Lisa J Coneyworth1, Amanda Avery1, Simon J M Welham1.
Abstract
Vegan and vegetarian diets are becoming increasingly popular. Dietary restrictions may increase the risk of iodine deficiency. This systematic review aims to assess iodine intake and status in adults following a vegan or vegetarian diet in industrialised countries. A systematic review and quality assessment were conducted in the period May 2019-April 2020 according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies were identified in Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, PubMed, Scopus, and secondary sources. Fifteen articles met inclusion criteria. Participants included 127,094 adults (aged ≥ 18 years). Vegan groups presented the lowest median urinary iodine concentrations, followed by vegetarians, and did not achieve optimal status. The highest iodine intakes were recorded in female vegans (1448.0 ± 3879.0 µg day-1) and the lowest in vegetarians (15.6 ± 21.0 µg day-1). Omnivores recorded the greatest intake in 83% of studies. Seaweed contributed largely to diets of vegans with excessive iodine intake. Vegans appear to have increased risk of low iodine status, deficiency and inadequate intake compared with adults following less restrictive diets. Adults following vegan and vegetarian diets living in countries with a high prevalence of deficiency may be more vulnerable. Therefore, further monitoring of iodine status in industrialised countries and research into improving the iodine intake and status of adults following vegan and vegetarian diets is required.Entities:
Keywords: iodine deficiency; iodine intake; iodine status; vegan; vegetarian
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32486114 PMCID: PMC7352501 DOI: 10.3390/nu12061606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Population–intervention–comparison–outcome (PICOS) criteria for study inclusion and exclusion.
| Criteria Category | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Adults (aged ≥ 18 y) residing in industrialised nations. | Individuals (aged < 18 y), unless results display separate data; adults residing in developing countries; populations with a high prevalence of thyroid disorders. |
| Intervention/exposure | Participants with any type of dietary preference or restriction. Voluntary or otherwise. | Use of a dietary grouping without defining diet characteristics. |
| Comparators | Differing dietary preference or restriction. | None. |
| Outcome measure | Iodine intake or status measured by UIC or analysis of dietary records. | No analysis of iodine intake or status; use of thyroid measures alone for iodine intake and status. |
| Study design | Any study design with relevant outcomes. | None. |
NHLBI tool for quality assessment of included studies.
| Question | |||||||||||||||
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| Study, Year | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | Rating |
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| Alles, 2017 [ |
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| Fair | |||||||||||
| Draper, 1993 [ |
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| Fair | |||||||||||
| Henjum, 2018 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
| Krajcovicová-Kudlácková, 2003 [ |
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| Fair | |||||||||||
| Leung, 2011 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
| Lightowler, 1998 [ |
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| Fair | |||||||||||
| Lightowler, 2002 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
| Nebl, 2019 [ |
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| Good | ||||||||||||
| Schűpbach, 2017 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
| Sobiecki, 2016 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
| Waldmann, 2003 [ |
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| Good | |||||||||||
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| Remer, 1999 [ | Good | ||||||||||||||
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| Elorinne, 2016 [ |
| Fair | |||||||||||||
| Kristensen, 2015 [ |
| Fair | |||||||||||||
| Rauma, 1994 [ |
| Poor | |||||||||||||
+, yes; −, no; ?, cannot determine; a, not applicable; r, not reported; (outlined), fixed answers according to NHLBI recommendations.
Iodine status and deficiency in vegans, vegetarians, and omnivores in industrialised countries.
| Study, Year | Assessment Method | Dietary Group (n) (Male, Female) | Iodine Status by UIC | Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elorinne, 2016 [ | Spot UIC Sandell–Kolthoff method. | Vegan (21) | 15.0 (4.6, 21.8) 1,** | Severe |
| Omnivore (18) | 37.4 (17.7, 86.5) 1 | Moderate | ||
| Henjum, 2018 [ | Spot UIC. | Vegan (9) | 38.0 1,** | Moderate |
| Vegetarian (27) | ||||
| Omnivore (367) | 80.0 1 | Mild | ||
| Krajcovicová-Kudlácková, 2003 [ | 24 h UIC Sandell–Kolthoff method. | Vegan (15) (6,9) | 71.0 (9.0–204.0) 2,** | Mild |
| Vegetarian (31) (12,19) | 177.0 (44.0–273.0) 2,** | Optimal | ||
| Omnivore (Mixed Diet) (35) (15,20) | 210.0 (76.0–423.0) 2 | Optimal with risk of health consequences | ||
| Leung, 2011 [ | Spot UIC spectrophotometry. | Vegan (62) (19,43) | 78.5 (6.8–964.7) 2,* | Mild |
| Vegetarian (78) (26,52) | 147.0 (9.3–778.6) 2 | Optimal | ||
| Lightowler, 1998 [ | Four 24 h UIC Sandell–Kolthoff method reaction. | Vegan (30) (11,19) | Total, 20.2 1, M, 16.8 1, F, 20.5 1 | Severe-Moderate |
| Rauma, 1994 [ | 24 h UIC. | Vegan (Living Food Diet) (10) | <450.0 (<200.0–1700.0) 2 | Optimal with risk of health consequences |
| Omnivore (12) | <500.0 (300.0−1200.0) 2 | |||
| Remer, 1999 [ | Two 24 h UIC. | Vegetarian (6) (3,3) | 36.6 ± 8.8 3,* | Moderate |
| Omnivore (6) (3,3) | 50.2 ± 14.0 3 | Mild | ||
| Omnivore (High Protein) (6) (3,3) | 61.0 ± 8 3 | Mild | ||
| Schüpbach, 2017 [ | Four fasted spot UIC. | Vegan (53) (20,33) | 56.0 (27.0–586.0) 2,* | Mild |
| Vegetarian (53) (17,36) | 75.0 (1.0–610.0) 2 | Mild | ||
| Omnivore (100) (37,63) | 83.0 (22.0–228.0) 2 | Mild |
M, male; F, female; 1, median (25th–75th percentile); 2, median (range); 3, mean ± SD; * significantly different between dietary group comparison; p < 0.05, ** p < 0.001; criteria for iodine deficiency disorders (WHO); severe < 20 µg day−1, moderate 20–49 µg day−1, mild 50–99 µg day−1, adequate 100–199 µg day−1, excessive risk of adverse health consequences ≥ 300 µg day−1.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram for included studies.
Studies investigating iodine among vegans, vegetarians, and omnivores in industrialised countries.
| Study, Year | Study Design | Location | Dietary Groups | Sample ( | Method of Dietary Classification | Average Diet Adherence (Years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alles, 2017 [ | Cross-Sectional | France | Vegan | 789 | Assessed by investigators pre-study | NA |
| Vegetarian | 2370 | |||||
| Omnivore | 90,664 | |||||
| Draper, 1993 [ | Cross-sectional | London, UK | Vegan | 38 (18,20) | Self-reported | 1.0 |
| Lacto-Vegetarian | 52 (16,36) | 2.0 | ||||
| Demi-vegetarian | 37 (13,24) | 5.0–9.0 | ||||
| Elorinne, 2016 [ | Matched pairs by age and sex | Kuopio, Finland | Vegan | 22 (16,6) | Self-reported | 8.6 |
| Omnivore | 19 (11,8) | NA | ||||
| Henjum, 2018 [ | Cross-Sectional | Norway, eastern and western geographical regions | Vegan | 27 | Self-reported | NA |
| Vegetarian | 9 | |||||
| Omnivore | 367 | |||||
| Kristensen, 2015 [ | Matched pairs by age | Denmark | Vegan | 75 (36,39) | Self-reported | ≤1.0 |
| Omnivore | 1627 (716, 911) | NA | ||||
| Krajcovicová-Kudlácková, 2003 [ | Cross-sectional | Slovakia | Vegan | 15 (6,9) | Self-reported | 9.7 |
| Vegetarian | 31 (12,19) | 9.0 | ||||
| Omnivore (Mixed Diet) | 35 (15,20) | NA | ||||
| Leung, 2011 [ | Cross-sectional | Boston, Massachusetts | Vegan | 63 | Self-reported | 11.3 ± 11.7 1 |
| Vegetarian | 78 | 5.6 ± 5.7 1 | ||||
| Lightowler, 1998 [ | Cross-sectional | London and surrounding counties, UK | Vegan | 30 (11,19) | Self-reported | M, 10.0, F, 9.2 |
| Lightowler, 2002 [ | Cross-sectional | London and the south-east of England, UK | Vegan | 26 (11, 15) | Self-reported | M, 9.9, F, 11.7 |
| Nebl, 2019 [ | Cross-sectional | Hanover, Germany | Vegan | 27 (11,16) | Assessed by investigators pre-study | >2.0 |
| Vegetarian | 25 (10, 15) | >2.0 | ||||
| Omnivore | 27 (10,17) | >3.0 | ||||
| Rauma, 1994 [ | Matched pairs | Kuopio, Finland. | Vegan (Living Food Diet) | 12 | Self-reported | 6.7 ± 3.8 1 |
| Omnivore | 12 | NA | ||||
| Remer, 1999 [ | Repeated-measures | Germany | Vegetarian (Lacto) | 6 (3,3) | Allocated by investigators | 0.0 |
| Omnivore | 6 (3,3) | |||||
| Omnivore (High protein) | 6 (3,3) | |||||
| Schüpbach, 2017 [ | Cross-sectional | Lausanne and Zurich, Switzerland | Vegan | 53 (20,33) | Self-reported | ≤1.0 |
| Vegetarian | 53 (17,36) | ≤1.0 | ||||
| Omnivore | 100 (37,63) | ≤1.0 | ||||
| Sobiecki, 2016 [ | Cross-sectional | Oxford, UK | Vegan | 803 | Assessed by investigators pre-study | ≤1.0 |
| Vegetarian | 6673 | ≤1.0 | ||||
| Pescatarian | 4531 | ≤1.0 | ||||
| Omnivore (Meat-eaters) | 18,244 | ≤1.0 | ||||
| Waldmann, 2003 [ | Cross-sectional | Hanover, Germany | Vegan (Strict) | 98 | Assessed by investigators pre-study | 4.3 |
| Vegan (Moderate) | 56 | 3.4 |
NA, not assessed; M, male; F, female; 1, mean ± SD.
Figure 2Visual representation of iodine status by median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) for included studies. The shaded grey bar represents the optimal range for iodine status (100–299 μg L−1). Significance values are not presented within this figure. See Table 3.
Assessment of dietary iodine intake for vegans, vegetarians, and omnivores in industrialised countries.
| Study, Year | Assessment of Dietary Iodine | Criteria for Iodine Intake Used in Study | Dietary Group (N) (Male, Female) | Dietary Iodine Intake (µG Day−1) | Contribution of Iodised Salt, Seaweed, and Iodine-Containing Supplements | Meeting Criteria (Y/N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Three repeated 24 h dietary records. | 150 µg day−1 RDI for the French population (2001) [ | Vegan (789) | 248.3 ± 9.8 (a) 1 | Seaweed, salt, or supplements not measured. | Y | |
| Three-day weighted food diaries. Analysed using UK Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food data. | DRV of 140 µg day−1 | Vegan (38) (18,20) | M, 98.0 ± 42.0 2,** | 95% used sea salt or seaweed. | N | |
| Lacto-Vegetarian (52) (16,36) | M, 216.0 ± 73.0 2,** | No iodine provided by salt, seaweed or supplements. | Y | |||
| Demi-Vegetarian (35) (13,24) | M, 253.0 ± 164.0 2,** | No iodine provided by salt, seaweed or supplements. | Y | |||
| Four-day weighed food diary. | 150 µg day−1 NNR (2012) [ | Vegan (70) (33,37) | M, 64.0 (43.0–91.0) 3,** | Salt not measured. | N | |
| Omnivore (1257) (566,691) | M, 213.0 (180.0–269.0) 3 | Salt not measured. | Y | |||
| Four-day weighed food diary with duplicate portion technique. | 140 mg day−1 RNI Department of Health (1991) [ | Vegan | M, 138.0 ± 149.0 2 | Salt not measured. | M, N | |
| Four -day food diaries with duplicate portion technique. | 140 mg day−1 RNI Department of Health (1991) [ | Vegan | Diet Diary | Salt not measured. | Diet Diary | |
| Three-day food diaries analysed by PROD16.4®. | 200 µg day−1 RV German, Austrian and Swiss Nutrition Societies (2019) [ | Vegan | 57.7 (48.4, 67.0) 4,* | Salt or seaweed not measured. | N | |
| Vegetarian (25) (10,15) | 61.6 (49.4, 73.7) 4,* | N | ||||
| Omnivore | 88.8 (64.1, 114.0) 4,** | N | ||||
| Seven-day food diaries analysed by NUTRICA Finland. | 0.1–0.2 mg day−1 RDA (120–200 µg day−1) | Vegan (Living Food Diet) (9) | 29.0 ± 18.0 2 | One participant did not use iodised salt. | N | |
| Omnivore (8) | 222.0 ± 93.0 2 | Y | ||||
| Five-day dietary intervention of pre-selected food items representing each diet. Calculated using food tables. | NA | Vegetarian (Ovo-Vegetarian)(6) | 15.6 ± 21.0 2 | No iodized salt, seaweed or supplements were permitted during the study. All drinks including water were low in iodine and other minerals. | N | |
| Omnivore (High Protein) (6) | 44.5 ± 16.5 2 | N | ||||
| Pre-study questionnaire identifying regularly consumed foods. | 200 mg day−1 RI, German Society of Nutrition (2000) [ | Vegan (Strict) (98) (48,50) | M, 87.7 ± 30.6 2 | Salt not measured. | N | |
| 112-item semi-quantitative FFQ. | 150 µg day−1 RDA, dietary reference intakes for iodine (2001) [ | Vegan | M, 55.5 ± 40.0 2 | Salt not measured. | M, N | |
| Vegetarian | M, 141.0 ± 77.4 2 | M, N | ||||
| Pescatarian | M, 197.4 ± 84.7 2 | Y | ||||
| Omnivore (Meat-Eaters) (18,244) (3798,14446) | M, 214.3 ± 85.6 2 | Y |
Abbreviations; RDI, Recommended Daily Intake; DRV, Daily Recommended Value; NNR, Nordic Nutrition Recommendations; RNI, Recommended Nutrient Intake; RV, Recommended Value; RDA, Recommended Daily Allowance; RI, Recommended Intake; (a), adjusted by age and sex; 1, mean ± SEM; 2 mean ± SD; 3, median (25th–75th percentile); 4, mean (95% CI); * significant difference with other dietary groups; p < 0.005 ** significant difference with other dietary groups; p < 0.001.
Figure 3Visual representation of estimated average iodine intake (µg day−1) for included studies. The grey dashed line represents the adequate intake recommended by the WHO of 150 µg day−1. (a), mixed gender values. Significance values are not presented within this figure. See Table 5.
Summary of salt fortification programs present in included studies [59].
| Country | Year | Iodate and/or Iodide | Iodine Amount | State of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boston (U.S.) | 1920 | Iodide | 43 | Mandatory |
| Denmark | 1999 | Iodide | 13 | Mandatory |
| France | 1997 | Iodide | 10–15 | Voluntary |
| Finland | 1963 | Iodide | 25 | Voluntary |
| Germany | 1981 | Iodate | 15–20 | Voluntary |
| Norway | NA | Iodide | 5 | Voluntary |
| Slovakia | 1966 | Iodide | 25 ± 10 | Mandatory |
| Switzerland | 1922 | Both | 20–30 | Voluntary |
| UK | NA | Iodide | 10–22 | Voluntary |