| Literature DB >> 22916131 |
Marjolein Bonthuis1, Karlijn J van Stralen, Enrico Verrina, Alberto Edefonti, Elena A Molchanova, Anita C S Hokken-Koelega, Franz Schaefer, Kitty J Jager.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Growth charts based on data collected in different populations and time periods are key tools to assess children's linear growth. We analyzed the impact of geographic factors and the secular trend on height-for-age charts currently used in European populations, developed up-to-date European growth charts, and studied the effect of using different charts in a sample of growth retarded children. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22916131 PMCID: PMC3419735 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0042506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of different growth charts.
| Country or growth chart | Years of Survey | Ages (years) | Number of children | Sample representativefor entire country | Exclusion criteria | Modeling technique used |
| Belgium | 2002–2004 | 0–21 | 15,989 | No | Non Belgian parents, chronic illness,born before 37 weeks | LMS |
| Czech Republic | 2001 | 0–19 | 59,000 | Yes | ||
| Denmark | 1974 | 0–18 | 13,210 | Yes | Non Danish parents | |
| Estonia | 1996–1997 | 2–20 | 20,367 | Yes | cubic splines | |
| Finland | 1959–1983 | 0–19 | 2,897 | No | Born before 36 weeks, birth weight<2500 g, chronic illness | Spline function |
| France | 1953–1975 | 0–20 | 497 | Weighted LS | ||
| Greece | 2000–2001 | 0–18 | 9,797 | No | LMS | |
| Germany | 2003–2006 | 0–18 | 17,079 | Yes | Illness and medications that could affect growth | LMS |
| Hungary | 1979 | 3–18 | 5,685 | |||
| Italy | 1996–2004 | 2–20 | 69,917 | Yes | Extended mechanistic growth function (EMGF) | |
| Lithuania | 1996–2003 | 0–18 | 9,000 | Yes | ||
| Netherlands | 1996–1997 | 0–25 | 14,500 | Yes | Illness and medications that could affect growth | LMS |
| Norway | 2003–2006 | 0–19 | 8,299 | No | One/both parents outside Northern Europe, chronic illness, prematurity | LMS |
| Russia | 1980’s | 0–17 | ||||
| Spain | 2000–2004 | 0–18 | 32,064 | Yes | Non Spanish parents, chronic illness, medication use | LMS |
| Sweden | 1992 | 0–18 | 3,650 | Yes | Polynomial function | |
| Switzerland | 1954–1976 | 0–20 | 274 | Yes | Non Swiss parents, birth weight <2500 g, illness | Spline function |
| United Kingdom | 1972–1993 | 0–23 | 25,385 | Yes | Non-Caucasian children | LMS |
| CDC | 1963–1994 | 0–19 | 950,928 | Yes | Birth weight <1500 g | LMS |
| WHO growth standards | 1996–2003 | 0–5 | 8,440 | Yes | Health, environmental, or economic constraints to growth (morbidities, multiple birth etc.) | BCPE with cubic splines |
| WHO growth charts | 1963–1974 | 5–19 | 22,917 | Yes | Birth weight <1500 g | |
| Euro-Growth reference | 1990–1996 | 0–3 | 2,245 | Yes | Illness, birth before 37 weeks, birth weight <2500 g |
Although the sample was not population based, the authors stated that height of sampled children will likely not be different from children living in other regions in the country;
Method similar to LMS method;
Russian charts are published in a key pediatric book, and are commonly applied by pediatricians throughout Russia;
The UK-WHO growth charts are applied in clinical practice in the United Kingdom and constitute growth data from WHO growth standards with birth data from the British 1990 charts. As the WHO growth standards are already included in the analyses, the new WHO-UK growth charts were not considered.
Figure 1Mean ±2
SE of height for different growth charts by sex and age.
Figure 2Mean heights by midyear of data collection for different growth charts.
Mean heights are shown for 1, 5, 10, and 18 year old boys and girls (▴ = national growth charts before 1990; ▪ = national growth charts of Southern European countries after 1990; • = national growth charts for Northern European countries after 1990; ▾ = CDC growth charts for 5, 10, and 18 year olds; ▴ = WHO growth charts for 5, 10, and 18 year olds; • = Euro-Growth for one year olds; and ♦ = WHO growth charts for one-year olds; horizontal lines represent the mean height for Northern and Southern Europe in the growth charts based on data after 1990).
Figure 3New growth charts proposed for Northern European countries without recent national growth charts.
Outer lines indicate −2.5 SDS and +2.5 SDS.
Figure 4New growth charts proposed for Southern European countries without recent national growth charts.
Outer lines indicate −2.5 SDS and +2.5 SDS.
Mean length SDS for 0–1 year old end-stage renal disease patients.
| Country | Mean length SDS (SE) | |||||
| N | National | Recent National/European | WHO | Euro-Growth | ||
| Belgium | 2 | −2.62 (1.64) | −2.62 (1.64) | −3.07 (1.19) | −2.62 (1.59) | |
| Czech Republic | 3 | −1.80 (0.70) | −1.80 (0.70) | −1.91 (0.91) | −1.99 (0.85) | |
| Finland | 7 | −1.39 (0.46) | −1.33 (0.47) | −1.24 (0.50) | −1.26 (0.49) | |
| France | 20 | −1.91 (0.42) | −2.12 (0.36) | −2.56 (0.43) | −2.46 (0.41) | |
| Lithuania | 2 | −1.00 (0.26) | −1.00 (0.26) | −1.07 (0.36) | −1.11 (0.36) | |
| Norway | 1 | −0.90 | −0.90 | −0.83 | −1.03 | |
| Romania | 1 | 1.97 | 1.16 | 1.25 | 1.08 | |
| Russia | 4 | −2.50 (1.15) | −3.23 (1.13) | −3.22 (1.26) | −3.27 (1.22) | |
| Spain | 22 | −1.72 (0.33) | −1.72 (0.33) | −1.99 (0.35) | −1.99 (0.38) | |
| Switzerland | 3 | −0.89 (0.86) | −0.75 (0.85) | −1.09 (0.61) | −0.86 (0.76) | |
| United Kingdom | 21 | −3.13 (0.37) | −2.83 (0.28) | −2.84 (0.30) | −2.87 (0.30) | |
| All countries | 86 | −2.04 (0.19) | −2.05 (0.17) | −2.24 (0.19) | −2.22 (0.19) | |
National growth charts refer to both growth charts based on data collected before 1990 as well as to recent national growth charts;
As the CDC recommends the use of the WHO growth standards for children under the age of 2 years, mean length SDS values based on the CDC for children younger than 2 years are not reported;
These values represent the average length SDS of children with ESRD from all European countries together.
Mean height SDS for 2–17 year old end-stage renal disease patients.
| Country | Mean height SDS (SE) | ||||
| N | National | Recent National/European | WHO | CDC | |
| Belgium | 8 | −0.16 (0.47) | −0.16 (0.47) | 0.01 (0.49) | 0.04 (0.47) |
| Czech Republic | 45 | −1.81 (0.17) | −1.81 (0.17) | −1.23 (0.16) | −1.21 (0.16) |
| Finland | 124 | −1.46 (0.11) | −1.79 (0.11) | −1.25 (0.11) | −1.23 (0.11) |
| France | 289 | −1.47 (0.11) | −1.83 (0.11) | −1.59 (0.10) | −1.59 (0.10) |
| Italy | 541 | −2.13 (0.07) | −2.13 (0.07) | −1.83 (0.06) | −1.80 (0.06) |
| Lithuania | 28 | −1.52 (0.40) | −1.52 (0.40) | −1.12 (0.40) | −1.10 (0.38) |
| Norway | 54 | −1.82 (0.19) | −1.82 (0.19) | −1.30 (0.17) | −1.28 (0.17) |
| Romania | 73 | −3.39 (0.21) | −3.68 (0.20) | −3.22 (0.18) | −3.22 (0.17) |
| Russia | 234 | −2.06 (0.13) | −2.74 (0.12) | −2.23 (0.12) | −2.21 (0.12) |
| Slovakia | 6 | −1.57 (0.47) | −1.54 (0.45) | −1.13 (0.46) | −1.07 (0.45) |
| Spain | 729 | −1.43 (0.05) | −1.43 (0.05) | −1.35 (0.05) | −1.36 (0.05) |
| Switzerland | 170 | −1.25 (0.11) | −1.26 (0.12) | −1.06 (0.10) | −1.05 (0.10) |
| United Kingdom | 1101 | −1.79 (0.03) | −1.99 (0.02) | −1.43 (0.02) | −1.44 (0.02) |
| All countries | 3402 | −1.75 (0.03) | −1.91 (0.03) | −1.55 (0.03) | −1.55 (0.03) |
National growth charts refer to both growth charts based on data collected before 1990 as well as to recent national growth charts;
Height-for-age reference values according to the Euro-Growth reference are not available for children over the age of 3 years;
These values represent the average height SDS of children with ESRD from all European countries together.
Figure 5Height-SDS and prevalence of short stature for different growth charts in end-stage renal disease patients.
Mean height-SDS and prevalence of short stature according to different growths are shown separately for 0–1 year old and 2–17 year old patients. The National growth charts include both recent national growth charts as the growth charts based on data collected before 1990.