Urine iodine concentration in hospitalised infants with thyroid dysfunction
Christy Hou, Michelle Jack, Annabelle Hobbs, Geoffrey Ambler, Yoon Hi Cho

TL;DR
This study explores how urine iodine concentration helps identify iodine issues in hospitalized infants with thyroid problems.
Contribution
The study evaluates UIC as a clinical tool for diagnosing iodine excess or deficiency in infants with thyroid dysfunction.
Findings
13.8% of infants had iodine deficiency, and 53.9% had iodine excess based on UIC levels.
Extremely high UIC was linked to lower free thyroxine levels and specific clinical factors like prematurity and cardiac anomalies.
Free thyroxine levels may be a better indicator of thyroid dysfunction than TSH in infants with high UIC.
Abstract
Iodine is essential to thyroid hormone production, and both excess and deficiency can cause thyroid dysfunction in infants. While urinary iodine concentration (UIC) is used to assess population iodine status, there is no gold standard for determining iodine status in individual infants. Our study aimed to examine the clinical use of UIC in the investigation of thyroid dysfunction in hospitalised infants. We examined hospital records of infants (age < 24 months) admitted to The Children’s Hospital at Westmead who had UIC collected in the context of thyroid dysfunction between 2007–2009 and 2017–2021, two time periods separated by changes in public health measures for iodine nutrition and local clinical practice. Of 152 infants, 13.8% had UIC in iodine deficient range (WHO population-based definition: UIC < 100 µg/L) and 53.9% in iodine excess range (UIC ≥ 300 µg/L). Highest quartile…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThyroid Disorders and Treatments · Neonatal Health and Biochemistry · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
