PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Tg in Adults as a Sensitive Biomarker of Iodine Status: A 5-Year Follow up Population Study in Different Levels of Iodine Intake Regions.

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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135553
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. e0135553

Abstract

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This study was to evaluate the usefulness of serum thymoglobulin (Tg) in adults to assess iodine status through a 5-year cohort study which was conducted in three regions with different levels of iodine intake: mild deficiency, more than adequate, and excess, from 1999 to 2004 in China. A total of 3099 subjects over 14 years old with normal serum levels of Tg in 1999 were eligible, of whom 2448 were followed in 2004. Serum levels of thyroid hormones and thyroid autoantibodies as well as urine iodine were measured, and B-mode ultrasonography of the thyroid was performed. A general linear model was performed to determine the determinant factors of serum Tg. Among subjects with mildly deficient iodine intake, those with more than adequate intake, and those with excessive intake, the baseline levels of serum Tg were substantially different (7.5μg/L, 5.9μg/L, and 6.8μg/L respectively, P<0.01), which were associated with age, sex, the rate of positive TgAb, abnormal thyroid volume, abnormal TSH, and positive personal history of thyroid diseases. The data from 1856 subjects with normal range of thyroid parameters but no personal history of thyroid diseases were analyzed to clarify the effect of iodine intake on Tg. Among these three regions, the serum Tg levels were substantially different in both 1999 and 2004, with a similar pattern for increased Tg (ΔTg) (3.1μg/L, 2.5μg/L and 3.5μg/L respectively, P<0.01). The general linear model analysis revealed that age, Tg, and baseline TSH levels were the determinants of ΔTg besides iodine intake. In conclusion, serum Tg in adults, resulting from a time-accumulative effect of iodine exposure, is a useful biomarker of regional iodine intake.