Greenberg Center for Skeletal Dysplasias, McKusick-Nathans Department of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, 733 N. Broadway Suite 579, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2021 Dec 23;16(1):522. doi: 10.1186/s13023-021-02141-4.
Achondroplasia is the most common genetic skeletal disorder causing disproportionate short stature/dwarfism. Common additional features include spinal stenosis, midface retrusion, macrocephaly and a generalized spondylometaphyseal dysplasia which manifest as spinal cord compression, sleep disordered breathing, delayed motor skill acquisition and genu varus with musculoskeletal pain. To better understand the interactions and health outcomes of these potential complications, we embarked on a multi-center, natural history study entitled CLARITY (achondroplasia natural history study). One of the CLARITY objectives was to develop growth curves (length/height, weight, head circumference, weight-for-height) and corresponding reference tables of mean and standard deviations at 1 month increments from birth through 18 years for clinical use and research for achondroplasia patients.
All available retrospective anthropometry data including length/height, weight and head circumference from achondroplasia patients were collected at 4 US skeletal dysplasia centers (Johns Hopkins University, AI DuPont Hospital for Children, McGovern Medical School University of Texas Health, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health). Weight-for-age values beyond 3 SD above the mean were excluded from the weight-for-height and weight-for-age curves to create a stricter tool for weight assessment in this population.
Over 37,000 length/height, weight and head circumference measures from 1374 patients with achondroplasia from birth through 75 years of age were compiled in a REDCap database. Stature and weight data from birth through 18 years of age and head circumference from birth through 5 years of age were utilized to construct new length/height-for-age, weight-for-age, head circumference-for-age and weight-for-height curves.
Achondroplasia-specific growth curves are essential for clinical care of growing infants and children with this condition. In an effort to provide prescriptive, rather than purely descriptive, references for weight in this population, extreme weight values were omitted from the weight-for-age and weight-for-height curves. This well-phenotyped cohort may be studied with other global achondroplasia populations (e.g. Europe, Argentina, Australia, Japan) to gain further insight into environmental or ethnic influences on growth.
软骨发育不全是最常见的遗传性骨骼疾病,导致不成比例的身材矮小/侏儒症。常见的其他特征包括脊柱狭窄、面中部后缩、大头畸形和全身性脊柱骨骺发育不良,这些特征表现为脊髓压迫、睡眠呼吸障碍、运动技能发育延迟以及膝内翻和骨骼肌肉疼痛。为了更好地了解这些潜在并发症的相互作用和健康结果,我们开展了一项名为 CLARITY(软骨发育不全自然史研究)的多中心自然史研究。CLARITY 的目标之一是为临床和研究目的开发从出生到 18 岁以 1 个月为增量的生长曲线(身高/长度、体重、头围、身高体重比)以及相应的平均值和标准差参考表,适用于软骨发育不全患者。
从美国 4 个骨骼发育不良中心(约翰霍普金斯大学、艾尔杜邦儿童医院、德克萨斯大学健康医学分校麦戈文医学院、威斯康星大学医学院和公共卫生学院)收集了所有可获得的软骨发育不全患者的回顾性人体测量学数据,包括身高/长度、体重和头围。体重与身高比和体重与年龄比曲线中排除了超过平均值 3 个标准差以上的体重值,以创建更严格的工具,用于评估该人群的体重。
在 REDCap 数据库中编译了来自 1374 名软骨发育不全患者的超过 37000 次身高/长度、体重和头围测量值,从出生到 75 岁。从出生到 18 岁的身高和体重数据以及从出生到 5 岁的头围数据用于构建新的身高/长度与年龄比、体重与年龄比、头围与年龄比和体重与身高比曲线。
特定于软骨发育不全的生长曲线对于患有这种疾病的生长中婴儿和儿童的临床护理至关重要。为了为该人群的体重提供规定性而非纯粹描述性的参考,从体重与年龄比和体重与身高比曲线中排除了极端体重值。这个表现良好的队列可以与其他全球软骨发育不全人群(例如欧洲、阿根廷、澳大利亚、日本)一起进行研究,以进一步了解环境或种族对生长的影响。