Intraindividual variation in urinary iodine concentrations: Effect of adjustment on population distribution using two and three repeated spot urine collections

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Abstract

Objectives: To determine the effect of adjustment for intraindividual variation on estimations of urinary iodine concentrations (UIC), prevalence of iodine deficiency and population distribution of iodine status. Setting: Community-dwelling older adults from New South Wales, Australia. Participants: 84 healthy men and women aged 60. 95 years were recruited prior to introduction of the mandatory iodine fortification programme. Primary and secondary outcome measures: UIC data were collected from three spot urine samples, each 1 week apart. Repeated measures analysis of variance were determined between-person (sb) and total (sobs) SDs. Adjusted UIC values were calculated as ((person's UIC.group mean)×(sb/s obs))+group mean, and a corrected UIC distribution was calculated. Results: The sb/sobs for using three samples and two samples were 0.83 and 0.79, respectively. Following adjustment for intraindividual variation, the proportion with UIC <50 μg/L reduced from 33% to 19%, while the proportion with UIC ≥100 μg/L changed from 21% to 17%. The 95th centile for UIC decreased from 176 to 136 μg/L. Adjustment by taking averages yielded a lesser degree of contraction in the distribution than the analysis of variance method. Conclusions: The addition of information about intraindividual variability has potential for increasing the interpretability of UIC data collected to monitor the iodine status of a population.

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Charlton, K. E., Batterham, M. J., Buchanan, L. M., & Mackerras, D. (2014). Intraindividual variation in urinary iodine concentrations: Effect of adjustment on population distribution using two and three repeated spot urine collections. BMJ Open, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003799

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