Natale Valerie, Rajagopalan Anuradha
The Forgotten Diseases Research Foundation, Santa Clara, California, USA.
BMJ Open. 2014 Jan 8;4(1):e003735. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003735.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has established a set of growth curves for use as international standards in children up to age 5. The WHO's position is that all economically advantaged children who were breastfed as infants grow similarly. As a result, a single set of growth charts can be used to judge growth in any child, regardless of race or ethnicity. The goal of this study was to compare mean heights, weights and head circumferences from a variety of studies with the WHO's data.
We compared data from the WHO's Multicentre Growth Reference Study (MGRS) with data from studies performed in 55 countries or ethnic groups.
PubMed, WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition, SciELO, Google Scholar, Textbooks and Ministries of Statistics and Public Health.
Large recent studies (1988-2013) of economically advantaged groups, including comparisons with cohorts of breastfed children wherever possible.
Height varied somewhat among different national and ethnic groups. Means were generally within 0.5 of an SD of the MGRS means. Weight varied more than height, but the low MGRS means were seen as endorsing slenderness in the midst of an obesity epidemic. The mean head circumference varied widely. In many groups, means were consistently 0.5-1 SD above the MGRS mean. Head size in breastfed children at any age examined was far closer to local norms than to the MGRS means.
Height and weight curves may not be optimal fits in all cases. The differences between national or ethnic group head circumference means were large enough that using the WHO charts would put many children at risk for misdiagnosis of macrocephaly or microcephaly. Our findings indicate that the use of a single international standard for head circumference is not justified.
PROSPERO (# CRD42013003675).
世界卫生组织(WHO)制定了一套生长曲线,用作5岁以下儿童的国际标准。WHO的立场是,所有经济条件优越且婴儿期接受母乳喂养的儿童生长情况相似。因此,一套生长图表可用于评判任何儿童的生长情况,无论其种族或民族如何。本研究的目的是将来自各种研究的平均身高、体重和头围与WHO的数据进行比较。
我们将WHO多中心生长参考研究(MGRS)的数据与在全球55个国家或种族群体中开展的研究数据进行了比较。
PubMed、WHO儿童生长与营养不良全球数据库、SciELO、谷歌学术、教科书以及各国统计与公共卫生部。
近期针对经济条件优越群体开展的大型研究(1988 - 2013年),尽可能纳入与母乳喂养儿童队列的比较。
不同国家和种族群体的身高存在一定差异。均值通常在MGRS均值标准差的0.5范围内。体重的差异大于身高,但在肥胖流行的背景下,MGRS较低的均值被视为支持苗条身材。平均头围差异很大。在许多群体中,均值始终比MGRS均值高0.5 - 1个标准差。在任何检查年龄的母乳喂养儿童中,头围更大小大小更接近当地标准,而非MGRS均值。
身高和体重曲线在所有情况下可能并非最佳拟合。国家或种族群体头围均值之间的差异足够大,以至于使用WHO图表会使许多儿童面临大头畸形或小头畸形误诊的风险。我们的研究结果表明,使用单一国际头围标准是不合理的。
PROSPERO(# CRD42013003675)