| Literature DB >> 29150054 |
Clare L Cutland1, Eve M Lackritz2, Tamala Mallett-Moore3, Azucena Bardají4, Ravichandran Chandrasekaran5, Chandrakant Lahariya6, Muhammed Imran Nisar7, Milagritos D Tapia8, Jayani Pathirana9, Sonali Kochhar10, Flor M Muñoz11.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Adverse event; Case definition; Guidelines; Immunization; Low birth weight
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29150054 PMCID: PMC5710991 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.01.049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641
Validated tools used as proxy measures of birth weight.
| Measurement | Method of assessment | Cut-off values used | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newborn foot length | Foot length from center of heel pad to tip of big toe in millimeters | Hard plastic ruler pressed vertically against sole of foot (highest AUC) | 7.2 cm for 2000 g | Weakest correlation with LBW of all anthropometric measurements |
| Sole of foot placed on solid board with measuring tape | 7.8 cm for preterm | |||
| ⩽7.4 cm (7.3–7.4 cm) for 2500 g | AUC 0.94, 95%CI 0.92–0.96 | |||
| For <2500 g | ||||
| Footprint made on White paper, and tip of big toe and heel marked with pencil | 7.2 cm (Europe) | <8 cm at birth was 87% sensitive for LBW | ||
| 6.3–7.85 cm (Asia) | ||||
| 7.4–8 cm (Africa) | ||||
| Chest circumference | Chest circumference at level of nipples in centimeters | Non-elastic, flexible measuring tape graduated to nearest 0.1 cm, measured during expiration | ⩽30.4 cm (30.0–30.4 cm) | Highly predictive of LBW if measured at <24 h of age (AUC 0.98, 95%CI 0.96–0.99) |
| In meta-analysis, best anthropometric measurement to predict LBW | ||||
| Risk of hypothermia | ||||
| Mid upper arm circumference | Mid-point between tip of acromion process and olecranon process in centimeters | Non-elastic, flexible measuring tape graduated to nearest 0.1 cm | ⩽9.0 cm (8.7–9.0 cm) | Highly predictive of LBW if measured at <24 h of age (AUC 0.98, 95%CI 0.96–0.99) |
AUC – area under curve.
Fig. 1Tools used to measure birth weight (See above-mentioned references for further information.).
| Newborn infant weighed within 24 h of birth | AND |
| Use electronic scale which is graduated to 10 g | AND |
| Scale is calibrated at least once a year | AND |
| Scale placed on level, hard surface | AND |
| Scale tared to zero grams | AND |
| Weight recorded as <2500 g | OR |
| Birth weight recorded as <2500 g | AND |
| Birth weight assessed as per health care facility’s standard operating procedure, which fulfills criteria 1 to 5 of LOC1 |
| Newborn infant weighed within 24 h of birth | AND |
| Scale (electronic/spring) is graduated to at least 50 g | AND |
| Scale is calibrated at least once a year, or more often if moved | AND |
| Scale tared to zero grams or 0.00 kg | AND |
| Weight recorded as <2500 g | OR |
| Birth weight recorded as <2500 g | AND |
| Birth weight assessed as per health care facility’s standard operating procedure, which fulfills criteria 1 to 4 of LOC2 |
| Newborn infant weighed on day 1 or 2 of life (first 48 h of life) | AND |
| Weight measured using dial/spring/color-coded scale | AND |
| Weight assessed as <2500 g |
| Newborn infant ‘weight’ assessed on day 1 or 2 of life (first 48 h of life) | AND |
| Proxy measure of birth weight used | AND |
| Weight CATEGORY assessed as <2500 g |