Negative association between serum parathyroid hormone levels and urinary perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate concentrations in U.S. adults: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2005-2006

Ko, WC; Liu, CL; Lee, JJ; Liu, TP; Yang, PS; Hsu, YC; Cheng, SP

HERO ID

3807994

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

25514572

HERO ID 3807994
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Negative association between serum parathyroid hormone levels and urinary perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate concentrations in U.S. adults: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2005-2006
Authors Ko, WC; Liu, CL; Lee, JJ; Liu, TP; Yang, PS; Hsu, YC; Cheng, SP
Journal PLoS ONE
Volume 9
Issue 12
Page Numbers e115245
Abstract <strong>OBJECTIVES: </strong>Perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate are well-known inhibitors of the sodium-iodide symporter and may disrupt thyroid function. This exploratory study investigated the association among urinary perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate concentrations and parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels in the general U.S. population.<br /><br /><strong>METHODS: </strong>We analyzed data on 4265 adults (aged 20 years and older) from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in 2005 through 2006 to evaluate the relationship among urinary perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate concentration and PTH levels and the presence of hyperparathyroidism cross-sectionally.<br /><br /><strong>RESULTS: </strong>The geometric means and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) concentrations of urinary perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate were 3.38 (3.15-3.62), 40363 (37512-43431), and 1129 (1029-1239) ng/mL, respectively. After adjusting for confounding variables and sample weights, creatinine-corrected urinary perchlorate was negatively associated with serum PTH levels in women (P = 0.001), and creatinine-corrected urinary nitrate and thiocyanate were negatively associated with serum PTH levels in both sex groups (P = 0.001 and P<0.001 for men, P = 0.018 and P<0.001 for women, respectively). Similar results were obtained from sensitivity analyses performed for exposure variables unadjusted for creatinine with urinary creatinine added as a separate covariate. There was a negative relationship between hyperparathyroidism and urinary nitrate and thiocyanate [odds ratio (95% CI) = 0.77 (0.60-0.98) and 0.69 (0.61-0.79), respectively].<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>A higher urinary concentration of perchlorate, nitrate, and thiocyanate is associated with lower serum PTH levels. Future studies are needed to determine the pathophysiological background of the observation.
Doi 10.1371/journal.pone.0115245
Pmid 25514572
Wosid WOS:000349146300044
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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