Validation of established thyroid ultrasound volume norms in a Chernobyl cohort

Objective: To establish thyroid ultrasound volume norms appropriate for studies of diffuse goiter in a cohort of children and adolescents from an iodine-deficient population exposed to 131I by the Chernobyl fallout. Methods: A cohort of 11,970 Belarusians aged ≤18 years at the time of the 1986 Chern...

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Main Authors: Lydia B Zablotska, Robert J McConnell, Aleksandr V Rozhko, Patrick O'Kane, Vasilina Yauseyenka, Mark P Little, Victor Minenko, Vladimir Drozdovitch, Tamara Moskvicheva, Maureen Hatch, Tamara Yeudachkova, Kiyohiko Mabuchi, Elizabeth K Cahoon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bioscientifica 2025-07-01
Series:European Thyroid Journal
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Online Access:https://etj.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/etj/14/4/ETJ-25-0085.xml
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Summary:Objective: To establish thyroid ultrasound volume norms appropriate for studies of diffuse goiter in a cohort of children and adolescents from an iodine-deficient population exposed to 131I by the Chernobyl fallout. Methods: A cohort of 11,970 Belarusians aged ≤18 years at the time of the 1986 Chernobyl accident with individual thyroid radiation dose estimates was screened 10–18 years later. From these, a low-dose subset of 2,392 with no thyroid diseases was selected to construct age- and sex-specific normative values for thyroid ultrasound volume, compared to Belarusian Ministry of Health (MOH) norms and existing WHO and European standards. Results: Cohort-specific values were generally lower than MOH norms and WHO standards for 11–17-year-olds. For those aged ≥18 years, internal norms were 30% higher in males and 15–30% lower in females than MOH norms, and exceeded European values for both sexes. Thyroid volume norms were about 40% higher in males and 30% higher in females as a function of BSA compared to European values. Thyroid volume continued to increase in both sexes, and by age 30–34 years, cohort-specific norms were 6% higher in males and 26% higher in females than European values. Urinary iodine concentration did not significantly explain variance in thyroid volume beyond sex, age, and BSA. Conclusions: In this iodine-deficient cohort of young Belarusians exposed to 131I by Chernobyl fallout, thyroid ultrasound volumes differed substantially from MOH norms and established WHO standards, prompting a revision of diffuse goiter definition using cohort-specific normative values.
ISSN:2235-0802