Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Centre for Global Child Health, Peter Gilgan Centre for Research and Learning, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol. 2022 Nov;36(6):839-850. doi: 10.1111/ppe.12880. Epub 2022 May 16.
The INTERGROWTH-21st sex and gestational age (GA) specific newborn size standards (IG-NS) are intended to complement the World Health Organization Child Growth Standards (WHO-GS), which are not GA-specific. We examined the implications of using IG-NS at birth and WHO-GS at postnatal ages in longitudinal epidemiologic studies.
The aim of this study was to quantify the extent to which standardised measures of newborn size and growth are affected when using WHO-GS versus IG-NS at birth among term-born infants.
Data from two prenatal trials in Bangladesh (n = 755) and The Gambia (n = 522) were used to estimate and compare size at birth and growth from birth to 3 months when using WHO-GS only ('WHO-GS') versus IG-NS at birth and WHO-GS postnatally ('IG-NS'). Mean length-for-age (LAZ), weight-for-age (WAZ) and head circumference-for-age (HCAZ), and the prevalence of undernutrition (stunting: LAZ < -2SD; underweight: WAZ < -2SD; and microcephaly: HCAZ < -2SD) were estimated overall and by GA strata [early-term (37 -38 ), full-term (39 -40 ) and late-term (41 -43 )]. We used Bland-Altman plots to compare continuous indices and Kappa statistic to compare categorical indicators.
At birth, mean LAZ, WAZ and HCAZ, and the prevalence of undernutrition were most similar among newborns between 39 and 40 weeks of GA when using WHO-GS versus IG-NS. However, anthropometric indices were systematically lower among early-term infants and higher among late-term infants when using WHO-GS versus IG-NS. Early-term and late-term infants demonstrated relatively faster and slower growth, respectively, when using WHO-GS versus IG-NS, with the direction and magnitude of differences varying between anthropometric indices. Individual-level differences in attained size and growth, when using WHO-GS versus IG-NS, were greater than 0.2 SD in magnitude for >60% of infants across all anthropometric indices.
Using IG-NS at birth with WHO-GS postnatally is acceptable for full-term infants but may give a misleading interpretation of growth trajectories among early- and late-term infants.
INTERGROWTH-21 世纪胎儿性别和胎龄(GA)特定新生儿大小标准(IG-NS)旨在补充世界卫生组织儿童生长标准(WHO-GS),后者不针对 GA。我们研究了在纵向流行病学研究中,在出生时使用 IG-NS 和在出生后使用 WHO-GS 对新生儿大小和生长的标准化测量结果的影响。
本研究的目的是量化在足月出生的婴儿中,出生时使用 WHO-GS 与 IG-NS 对新生儿大小和生长的标准化测量结果的影响程度。
使用来自孟加拉国(n=755)和冈比亚(n=522)的两项产前试验的数据,估计并比较仅使用 WHO-GS(“WHO-GS”)和出生时使用 IG-NS 加出生后使用 WHO-GS(“IG-NS”)时出生时的大小和从出生到 3 个月的生长情况。估计了年龄别身长(LAZ)、年龄别体重(WAZ)和年龄别头围(HCAZ)的平均值,以及营养不足的患病率(生长迟缓:LAZ<-2SD;体重不足:WAZ<-2SD;小头畸形:HCAZ<-2SD),并按 GA 分层(早期足月:37-38 周;足月:39-40 周;晚期足月:41-43 周)进行了比较。我们使用 Bland-Altman 图比较连续指标,使用 Kappa 统计量比较分类指标。
在出生时,当使用 WHO-GS 与 IG-NS 时,39-40 周 GA 的新生儿之间的平均 LAZ、WAZ 和 HCAZ 以及营养不足的患病率最为相似。然而,与使用 IG-NS 相比,使用 WHO-GS 时,早产儿的体格指数系统较低,而晚产儿的体格指数较高。与使用 IG-NS 相比,当使用 WHO-GS 时,早产儿和晚产儿的生长速度分别较快和较慢,不同体格指数之间的差异方向和幅度也有所不同。当使用 WHO-GS 与 IG-NS 时,个体的生长大小差异在所有体格指数中,超过 60%的婴儿差异大于 0.2 SD。
对于足月婴儿,出生时使用 IG-NS 并在出生后使用 WHO-GS 是可以接受的,但可能会对早产儿和晚产儿的生长轨迹产生误导性解释。