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Iodine fortification of plant-based dairy and fish alternatives: the effect of substitution on iodine intake based on a market survey in the UK.

Katie NicolEva-Leanne ThomasAnne P NugentJayne V WoodsideKathryn H HartSarah C Bath
Published in: The British journal of nutrition (2022)
Milk, dairy products, and fish are the main sources of iodine in the UK. Plant-based products are increasingly popular, especially with young women, which may affect iodine intake as they are naturally low in iodine; this is concerning as iodine is required for fetal brain development. We, aimed to (i) assess the iodine fortification of products sold as alternatives to milk, yoghurt, cheese and fish through a cross-sectional survey of UK retail outlets in 2020, and (ii) model the impact of substitution with such products on iodine intake, using portion-based scenarios. We identified 300 products, including plant-based alternatives to: (i) milk ( n 146); (ii) yoghurt ( n 76); (iii) cheese ( n 67) and (iv) fish ( n 11). After excluding organic products ( n 48), which cannot be fortified, only 28 % ( n 29) of milk alternatives and 6 % ( n 4) of yoghurt alternatives were fortified with iodine, compared with 88 % ( n 92) and 73 % ( n 51), respectively, with Ca. No cheese alternative was fortified with iodine, but 55 % were fortified with Ca. None of the fish alternatives were iodine fortified. Substitution of three portions of dairy product (milk/yoghurt/cheese) per day with unfortified alternatives would reduce the iodine provided by 97·9 % (124 v . 2·6 µg) and substantially reduce the contribution to the adult intake recommendation (150 µg/d; 83 v . 1·8 %). Our study highlights that the majority of plant-based alternatives are not iodine fortified and that the use of unfortified alternatives put consumers at risk of iodine deficiency.
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