PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Iodine nutritional status of pregnant women in an urban area of northern Taiwan in 2018.

  • Chun-Jui Huang,
  • Chi-Lung Tseng,
  • Harn-Shen Chen,
  • Chii-Min Hwu,
  • Kam-Tsun Tang,
  • Justin Ging-Shing Won,
  • Chiao-Wei Shih,
  • Chang-Ching Yeh,
  • Chen-Chang Yang,
  • Fan-Fen Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
p. e0233162

Abstract

Read online

Pregnant women are considered as one of the most vulnerable groups for iodine deficiency. The Nutrition and Health Survey in Taiwan 2013 revealed that the median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) of non-pregnant women of child-bearing age of 15-44 years was 124 μg/L, which was adequate in general, but insufficient according to pregnancy criteria. The aim of this study was to determine the iodine nutritional status of pregnant women in an urban area of Northern Taiwan. A hospital-based cross-sectional survey was conducted in Taipei Veterans General Hospital. Random spot urine samples were collected from January to October, 2018 and UIC was determined by inductively coupled plasma mass-spectrometry. A food frequency questionnaire was also delivered to the participants. The overall median UIC was 225.3 μg/L (IQR: 109.1-514.2 μg/L) for 257 pregnant women ranging from 21-47 years-old. The distribution of UIC was as follows: 35.4% with UIC <150 μg/L, 17.1% with UIC within 150-249 μg/L, 21.8% with UIC within 250-499 μg/L, and 25.7% with UIC ≥500 μg/L. The use of prenatal multivitamin was very common among the participants: 79.4% (n = 204) took multivitamin either every day or less frequently, with 52.5% (n = 135) taking one pill every day, and only 20.6% (n = 53) never took multivitamin during their pregnancy. Other commonly consumed iodine-containing foods were dairy products and fish. Our results indicate that the iodine status in the studied women is adequate. However, efforts are still needed to avoid iodine deficiency as well as iodine excess.