| Literature DB >> 34201258 |
Lorena Rumbo-Rodríguez1, Miriam Sánchez-SanSegundo2, Rosario Ferrer-Cascales2, Nahuel García-D'Urso3, Jose A Hurtado-Sánchez1, Ana Zaragoza-Martí1,4.
Abstract
Anthropometrics are a set of direct quantitative measurements of the human body's external dimensions, which can be used as indirect measures of body composition. Due to a number of limitations of conventional manual techniques for the collection of body measurements, advanced systems using three-dimensional (3D) scanners are currently being employed, despite being a relatively new technique. A systematic review was carried out using Pubmed, Medline and the Cochrane Library to assess whether 3D scanners offer reproducible, reliable and accurate data with respect to anthropometrics. Although significant differences were found, 3D measurements correlated strongly with measurements made by conventional anthropometry, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and air displacement plethysmography (ADP), among others. In most studies (61.1%), 3D scanners were more accurate than these other techniques; in fact, these scanners presented excellent accuracy or reliability. 3D scanners allow automated, quick and easy measurements of different body tissues. Moreover, they seem to provide reproducible, reliable and accurate data that correlate well with the other techniques used.Entities:
Keywords: anthropometry; body scanner; reliability; validity; waist circumference; whole-body imaging
Year: 2021 PMID: 34201258 PMCID: PMC8230172 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18126213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
PubMed search strategy.
| Search Strategy | |
|---|---|
| #1 | (“whole body imaging [MeSH Terms] OR “body scanner” [Title/Abstract] OR “body scanning” [Title/Abstract] OR “3d images” [Title/Abstract] OR “three dimensional imaging” [Title/Abstract]) |
| #2 | (“anthropometry” [MeSH Terms] OR “anthropometrics” [Title/Abstract] OR “anthropometric measures” [Title/Abstract] OR “waist circumference” [MeSH Terms] OR “hip circumference” [Title/Abstract]) |
| #3 | (“reproducibility of results” [MeSH Terms] OR “validity” [Title/Abstract] OR “validation” [Title/Abstract] OR “reliability” [Title/Abstract]) |
| #4 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 |
First ten questions from the AXIS tool.
| Reference | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bragança et al., 2018 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Don’t know/comment | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | No |
| Adler et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Bourgeois et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Medina-Inojosa et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Ng et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Ng et al., 2019 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Brooke-Wavell et al., 1994 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Weiss et al., 2009 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | - | No |
| Pepper et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Harbin et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | No |
| Bragança et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Vonk & Daanen, 2015 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | - | No |
| Tinsley et al., 2019 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Ladouceur et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Ramos-Jiménez et al., 2018 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Kuehnapfel et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Koepke et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | Yes |
| Lu & Wang et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment | Yes | - | No |
Last ten questions from the AXIS tool.
| Reference | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bragança et al., 2018 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Adler et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | No | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Bourgeois et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| Medina-Inojosa et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Do not know/comment |
| Ng et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Ng et al., 2019 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Brooke-Wavell et al., 1994 [ | No | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Weiss et al., 2009 [ | No | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| Pepper et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Harbin et al., 2017 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Bragança et al., 2017 [ | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment |
| Vonk & Daanen et al., 2015 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Tinsley et al., 2019 [ | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Ladouceur et al., 2017 [ | No | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Do not know/comment | Yes | No | No | Do not know/comment |
| Ramos-Jiménez et al., 2018 [ | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Kuehnapfel et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Koepke et al., 2017 [ | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lu & Wang et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | Do not know/comment | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Do not know/comment | Do not know/comment |
Figure 1Selection of studies.
Description of the studies included in the review.
| Reference | Country | Year | Average Age | BMI (kg/m2) | Sample No. (n) | Objective | Type of Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bragança et al., 2018 [ | United Kingdom | 2018 | 24.03 | 22.62 | 37 (17 F 1/20 M 2) | To compare two anthropometric data collection techniques, i.e., manual methods and a Kinect-based 3D body scanner, to understand which provides more accurate and reliable results. | Cross-sectional study |
| Adler et al., 2017 [ | Germany | 2017 | 18–79 | 26.29 | 37 (17 F/20 M) | To investigate the longer-term validity and reliability of 3DPS-based body volume and %body fat over a period of approximately four weeks for application in epidemiological studies in the general adult population. | Cross-sectional study |
| Bourgeois et al., 2017 [ | USA | 2017 | 44 | 27.25 | 113 (73 F/40 M) | Critically evaluate three of these newer optical devices that differ in image acquisition and data processing technology, comparing body size and shape results with those obtained by reference methods. | Cross-sectional study |
| Medina-Inojosa et al., 2016 [ | USA | 2016 | 41.9 | 25.9 | 83 (40 F/43 M) | To evaluate the reliability and reproducibility of a 3D scanner in the measurement of anthropometric parameters in central obesity. | Cross-sectional study |
| Ng et al., 2016 [ | USA | 2016 | 44.45 | 26.4 | 37 (19 F/18 M) | Validate direct and derived anthropometrics of body composition from 3D scans of the whole body surface against criterion methods. | Cross-sectional study |
| Ng et al., 2019 [ | USA | 2019 | 44.8 | 27.2 | 407 (230 F/177 M) | Quantify the test-retest accuracy of 3DO PCA (principal component analysis) body composition estimates compared to DXA. | Cross-sectional study |
| Brooke-Wavell et al., 1994 [ | United Kingdom | 2009 | 27.9 | -3 | 10 (5 F/5 M) | Compare the reliability and repeatability of LASS scanner and anthropometrics. | Cross-sectional study |
| Weiss et al., 2009 [ | USA | 2009 | 42.93 | - | 30 (28 F/2 M) | Compare the accuracy and reproducibility of manual measurements vs. 3D photographic measurements of the abdomen and thigh circumference. | Cross-sectional study |
| Pepper et al., 2010 [ | USA | 2010 | 29.64 | 25.57 | 70 F | Evaluate the reliability and validity of a 3D laser body scanner for estimating waist and hip circumferences and the waist-to-hip ratio. | Cross-sectional study |
| Harbin et al., 2017 [ | USA | 2017 | 22.1 | 24.5 | 265 (146 F/119 M) | Compare and validate the accuracy of a 3D infrared body scanner for determining body composition against hydrostatic weighing (HW), bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) and anthropometry (skinfold thickness and circumferences). | Cross-sectional study |
| Bragança et al., 2017 [ | USA | 2017 | 24.03 | 22.6 | 37 (17 F/20 M) | Compare anthropometric data collected using a Kinect body imaging system with data collected using traditional manual methods. | Cross-sectional study |
| Vonk & Daanen, 2015 [ | Netherlands | 2015 | 21.5 | 21.43 | 156 (27 F/219 M) | Evaluate the repeatability and validity of the SizeStream scanner and Poikos modeling system by scanning a large number of subjects multiple times. | Cross-sectional study |
| Tinsley et al., 2019 [ | USA | 2019 | 33.6 | 25.1 | 179 (103 F/76 M) | Quantify the test-retest accuracy (reproducibility) of four commercially available 3DO scanners for anthropometrics and examine the validity of total and regional body volume estimates produced by these scanners compared to reference methods. | Cross-sectional study |
| Ladouceur et al., 2017 [ | Canada | 2017 | - | - | 20 (9 F/11 M) | Develop a systematic method to compare manual and digital anthropometrics and validate a commercial 3D laser scanner for anthropometric measurements. | Cross-sectional study |
| Ramos-Jiménez et al., 2018 [ | Mexico | 2018 | 21.7 | 24.86 | 285 (140 F/145 M) | Validate a 3D image digitizer (TC2-18) to determine body dimensions in a fast and reliable manner. | Cross-sectional study |
| Kuehnapfel et al., 2016 [ | Germany | 2016 | - | - | 108 (69 F/39 M) | Compare 3D laser-based body scanners with classical manual anthropometrics (CA) with respect to feasibility, reliability and validity. | Cross-sectional study |
| Koepke et al., 2017 [ | Switzerland | 2017 | 24.55 | 22.97 | 123 M | Compare scanning and manual anthropometrics techniques based on five selected body measurements. | Cross-sectional study |
| Lu & Wang et al., 2010 [ | China | 2010 | - | - | 263 (91 F/172 M) | To evaluate scanned measurements in terms of accuracy and precision. | Cross-sectional study |
1 Female. 2 Male. (In reference to the sex of the participants). 3 Information not reported in the paper.
Statistical analysis, results and conclusions of the included articles.
| Reference | Statistical Analysis | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bragança et al., 2018 [ | Accuracy: technical error of measurement (TEM) and relative technical error of measurement (%TEM). | Accuracy: TEM values < 2 cm. Higher manual technical accuracy (slightly lower values). | Despite being considered sufficiently accurate and reliable for certain applications, the 3D scanner showed, for almost all measurements, a different result than obtained using the manual technique. |
| Adler et al., 2017 [ | Validity: Pearson correlation coefficient and Bland-Altman plots. | Validity: 3D body volume and ADP strongly correlated (R = 0.99). | Good agreement between 3D and ADP. Good validity and excellent reliability of the 3D scan. |
| Bourgeois et al., 2017 [ | Comparison of measurements between methods: paired t-tests. | Hip circumference: significant difference between conventional anthropometry and 3D scan (#1 and #2) ( | Reproducible measurements correlate well with reference methods. |
| Medina-Inojosa et al., 2016 [ | Reproducibility: intraobserver and interobserver variability and paired | Intraobserver variations (reproducibility): 3.1 cm waist and 1.8 cm hip. | A 3D scanner is a more reliable and reproducible way to measure waist and hip circumference. |
| Ng et al., 2016 [ | Agreement between methods: univariate linear regressions. | Strong associations between methods for waist and hip circumference (R = 0.95 and 0.92, respectively). Significant differences of 1.75 cm for waist and 3.17 cm for hip between 3D and conventional anthropometry. | This study supports the use of 3D scanning as an accurate, reliable and automated surrogate for other methods. |
| Ng et al., 2019 [ | Model accuracy/precision: R2 and RMSE. | Precision of body composition comparing 3D scanner was DXA was as follows: fat mass, R = 0.88 | The 3D estimates may be somewhat less accurate than DXA estimates. |
| Brooke-Wavell et al., 1994 [ | Intraobserver and interobserver variability: standard error of measurement. | Comparison between methods (reliability): Women: significant differences ( | 3D measurements and anthropometry were generally similar. Larger interobserver differences for manual technique, lower precision. |
| Weiss et al., 2009 [ | - 1 | Intraobserver variations (reproducibility): researcher 1: 0.37 cm between repetitions, researcher 2: 0.406 cm and 3D: 0.171 cm. Very high correlations (r > 0.99), although higher 3D scan correlations (researcher 1 and 2 = 0.995 vs. 3D = 0.9988). | Greater precision and reproducibility of the measurement with the use of the 3D scanner. |
| Pepper et al., 2010 [ | Reproducibility: ICC and CV. Paired | ICC > 0.99 for all circumferences measured by 3D. CVs showed little difference between intraindividual measurements, showing high agreement between repeated measurements (CV 0.53%-1.68%). No significant difference between methods for waist and hip (3D: 87.87 cm and 104.15 cm vs. conventional anthropometry: 87.73 cm and 104.39 cm, respectively | 3D scanner reliable and valid technique compared to conventional anthropometry. |
| Harbin et al., 2017 [ | Level of agreement between methods: Bland-Altman graphs. | Significant difference ( | Advances must be made before 3D scans can be designated as an accurate method. |
| Bragança et al., 2017 [ | Comparison between methods: paired | Significant difference between various 3D measurements and conventional anthropometry ( | Reliability and accuracy depend on the ability to remain static. |
| Vonk & Daanen, 2015 [ | Repeatability: (ICC, ICC < 0.80: measurements with low repeatability. | SizeStream scan: 120 measurements: ICC > 0.90 and 20 measurements: ICC < 0.80. Mean SEM: 10.1 mm. Validity: 6 measurements by 3D and conventional anthropometry: significant difference ( | Only three of the six measurements compared could be validated (SizeStream scanner). Poikos is promising but less repeatable and valid than the SizeStream scanner. |
| Tinsley et al., 2019 [ | Accuracy: ICC and RMS-%CV. | Accuracy: circumferences (ICC from 0.974 to 0.999) and volumes (ICC from 0.952 to 0.999). Average of four scans for RMS-%CV: circumferences (1.1% to 1.3%) and body volume (1.9% to 2.3%). Circumference highest accuracy: hip (RMS-%CV < 1% for all), waist (0.7–1.6%), thigh (0.8–1.4%) and arm (1.4–2.8%). Volume highest accuracy: total (RMS-%CV < 1% for all), torso volume (approx. 1.2%), leg (approx. 2.5%) and arm (3–5%). | Excellent accuracy; however, relatively poor validity for total and regional body volume. |
| Ladouceur et al., 2017 [ | Concurrent validity between methods: Pearson product moment correlation coefficient (PPMC) and paired t-test. Systematic error between the two methods: paired t-test. Bland-Altman. | Significant difference between conventional anthropometry and 3D measurements ( | The results of this study have shown promise for the future. |
| Ramos-Jiménez et al., 2018 [ | Differences between methods: | 3D measurements highly correlated with those of conventional anthropometry and plestimography. | Valid and reliable measurements when evaluating adult individuals; however, it is important to minimize body motion. |
| Kuehnapfel et al., 2016 [ | Concordance of paired measurements: overall concordance correlation coefficient (OCCC). | Validity: excellent for height (OCCC = 0.995), weight (OCCC = 1.00), | Reliability of 3D measurements was generally excellent or good, with some exceptions. |
| Koepke et al., 2017 [ | Repeatability and agreement between repeated measurements within each method: mean differences, ICC, precision, and paired | 3D: no significant difference between repeated measurements and strong correlations: chest: 0.981; | Better accuracy and repeatability for 3D scanner. Highly correlated data, but important systematic differences. Therefore, the two techniques are not directly equivalent. |
| Lu & Wang., 2010 [ | Paired t-test and MAD (mean absolute difference) between scan-derived measurement and manual measurement for each dimension as a measure of accuracy performance. | Accuracy: significant difference between methods for chest circumference ( | 3D measurements more accurate than manual measurements. |
1 Information not reported in the article.