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New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India

Progress of national Universal Salt Iodization (USI) strategies is typically assessed by household coverage of adequately iodized salt and median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) in spot urine collections. However, household coverage does not inform on the iodized salt used in preparation of proce...

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Autores principales: van der Haar, Frits, Knowles, Jacky, Bukania, Zipporah, Camara, Boubacar, Pandav, Chandrakant S., Mwai, John Maina, Toure, Ndeye Khady, Yadav, Kapil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5946215/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29596369
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu10040430
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author van der Haar, Frits
Knowles, Jacky
Bukania, Zipporah
Camara, Boubacar
Pandav, Chandrakant S.
Mwai, John Maina
Toure, Ndeye Khady
Yadav, Kapil
author_facet van der Haar, Frits
Knowles, Jacky
Bukania, Zipporah
Camara, Boubacar
Pandav, Chandrakant S.
Mwai, John Maina
Toure, Ndeye Khady
Yadav, Kapil
author_sort van der Haar, Frits
collection PubMed
description Progress of national Universal Salt Iodization (USI) strategies is typically assessed by household coverage of adequately iodized salt and median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) in spot urine collections. However, household coverage does not inform on the iodized salt used in preparation of processed foods outside homes, nor does the total UIC reflect the portion of population iodine intake attributable to the USI strategy. This study used data from three population-representative surveys of women of reproductive age (WRA) in Kenya, Senegal and India to develop and illustrate a new approach to apportion the population UIC levels by the principal dietary sources of iodine intake, namely native iodine, iodine in processed food salt and iodine in household salt. The technique requires measurement of urinary sodium concentrations (UNaC) in the same spot urine samples collected for iodine status assessment. Taking into account the different complex survey designs of each survey, generalized linear regression (GLR) analyses were performed in which the UIC data of WRA was set as the outcome variable that depends on their UNaC and household salt iodine (SI) data as explanatory variables. Estimates of the UIC portions that correspond to iodine intake sources were calculated with use of the intercept and regression coefficients for the UNaC and SI variables in each country’s regression equation. GLR coefficients for UNaC and SI were significant in all country-specific models. Rural location did not show a significant association in any country when controlled for other explanatory variables. The estimated UIC portion from native dietary iodine intake in each country fell below the minimum threshold for iodine sufficiency. The UIC portion arising from processed food salt in Kenya was substantially higher than in Senegal and India, while the UIC portions from household salt use varied in accordance with the mean level of household SI content in the country surveys. The UIC portions and all-salt-derived iodine intakes found in this study were illustrative of existing differences in national USI legislative frameworks and national salt supply situations between countries. The approach of apportioning the population UIC from spot urine collections may be useful for future monitoring of change in iodine nutrition from reduced salt use in processed foods and in households.
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spelling pubmed-59462152018-05-15 New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India van der Haar, Frits Knowles, Jacky Bukania, Zipporah Camara, Boubacar Pandav, Chandrakant S. Mwai, John Maina Toure, Ndeye Khady Yadav, Kapil Nutrients Article Progress of national Universal Salt Iodization (USI) strategies is typically assessed by household coverage of adequately iodized salt and median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) in spot urine collections. However, household coverage does not inform on the iodized salt used in preparation of processed foods outside homes, nor does the total UIC reflect the portion of population iodine intake attributable to the USI strategy. This study used data from three population-representative surveys of women of reproductive age (WRA) in Kenya, Senegal and India to develop and illustrate a new approach to apportion the population UIC levels by the principal dietary sources of iodine intake, namely native iodine, iodine in processed food salt and iodine in household salt. The technique requires measurement of urinary sodium concentrations (UNaC) in the same spot urine samples collected for iodine status assessment. Taking into account the different complex survey designs of each survey, generalized linear regression (GLR) analyses were performed in which the UIC data of WRA was set as the outcome variable that depends on their UNaC and household salt iodine (SI) data as explanatory variables. Estimates of the UIC portions that correspond to iodine intake sources were calculated with use of the intercept and regression coefficients for the UNaC and SI variables in each country’s regression equation. GLR coefficients for UNaC and SI were significant in all country-specific models. Rural location did not show a significant association in any country when controlled for other explanatory variables. The estimated UIC portion from native dietary iodine intake in each country fell below the minimum threshold for iodine sufficiency. The UIC portion arising from processed food salt in Kenya was substantially higher than in Senegal and India, while the UIC portions from household salt use varied in accordance with the mean level of household SI content in the country surveys. The UIC portions and all-salt-derived iodine intakes found in this study were illustrative of existing differences in national USI legislative frameworks and national salt supply situations between countries. The approach of apportioning the population UIC from spot urine collections may be useful for future monitoring of change in iodine nutrition from reduced salt use in processed foods and in households. MDPI 2018-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5946215/ /pubmed/29596369 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu10040430 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
van der Haar, Frits
Knowles, Jacky
Bukania, Zipporah
Camara, Boubacar
Pandav, Chandrakant S.
Mwai, John Maina
Toure, Ndeye Khady
Yadav, Kapil
New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title_full New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title_fullStr New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title_full_unstemmed New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title_short New Statistical Approach to Apportion Dietary Sources of Iodine Intake: Findings from Kenya, Senegal and India
title_sort new statistical approach to apportion dietary sources of iodine intake: findings from kenya, senegal and india
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5946215/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29596369
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu10040430
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