University of Ottawa and Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (Joyal, Venkateswaran), Ottawa, Ont.; University of British Columbia (Collins, Arbour), Victoria, BC; Qikiqtani General Hospital (Miners), Iqaluit, NU; CHEO Research Institute (Barrowman, Sucha), Ottawa, Ont.; University of Saskatchewan (Joyal), Saskatoon, Sask.; University of Manitoba (Joyal), Winnipeg, Man.; Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. (Allen, Edmunds); Government of Nunavut Department of Health (Caughey, Doucette, Khatun); Qaujigiartiit Health Research Centre (Healey Akearok), Iqaluit, NU.
CMAJ. 2024 Oct 21;196(35):E1189-E1200. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.230905.
Inuit children from Nunavut have been observed to have high rates of macrocephaly, which sometimes leads to burdensome travel for medical evaluation, often with no pathology identified upon assessment. Given reports that World Health Organization (WHO) growth charts may not reflect all populations, we sought to compare head circumference measurements in a cohort of Inuit children with the WHO charts.
We extracted head circumference data from a previous retrospective cohort study where, with Inuit partnership, we reviewed medical records of Inuit children (from birth to age 5 yr) born between Jan. 1, 2010, and Dec. 31, 2013, and residing in Nunavut. To create a cohort of Inuit children similar to the cohorts used in the development of the WHO growth charts, we excluded children with preterm birth, documented neurologic or genetic disease, and most congenital anomalies. We compared head circumference values with the 2007 WHO charts using centiles estimated with a generalized additive model.
We analyzed records of 1960 Inuit children (8866 data points), of whom 993 (50.8%) were female. Most data were from ages 0 to 36 months. At all age points, we found that the study cohort had statistically significantly larger head circumferences than WHO medians, with most scores for head circumference measurements among Inuit children falling 0.5-1 standard deviations above the WHO reference ( < 0.001). At age 12 months, median head circumferences were 1.3 cm and 1.5 cm larger for male and female Inuit children, respectively. Using WHO growth curves, macrocephaly was significantly overdiagnosed and microcephaly was underdiagnosed ( < 0.001).
Our results support the observation that Inuit children from Nunavut have larger head circumferences than other populations, and use of the WHO charts may thus lead to overdiagnosis of macrocephaly and underdiagnosis of microcephaly. Population-specific growth curves for Inuit children should be considered to provide timely and appropriate diagnoses of microcephaly and avoid overinvestigation of macrocephaly.
努纳武特的因纽特儿童被观察到存在较高的大头畸形率,这有时导致他们需要进行繁琐的医疗评估旅行,但通常在评估时并未发现任何病理。鉴于有报道称世界卫生组织(WHO)的生长图表可能无法反映所有人群,我们试图将因纽特儿童的头围测量值与 WHO 图表进行比较。
我们从之前的一项回顾性队列研究中提取了头围数据,在因纽特人的合作下,我们回顾了 2010 年 1 月 1 日至 2013 年 12 月 31 日期间出生并居住在努纳武特的因纽特儿童(0-5 岁)的医疗记录。为了创建一个与 WHO 生长图表开发中使用的队列相似的因纽特儿童队列,我们排除了有早产、有记录的神经或遗传疾病以及大多数先天性异常的儿童。我们使用广义加性模型估计的百分位数将头围值与 2007 年 WHO 图表进行了比较。
我们分析了 1960 名因纽特儿童的记录(8866 个数据点),其中 993 名(50.8%)为女性。大多数数据来自 0 至 36 个月龄。在所有年龄点,我们发现研究队列的头围均显著大于 WHO 中位数,因纽特儿童的大多数头围测量值分数比 WHO 参考值高出 0.5-1 个标准差(<0.001)。在 12 个月龄时,男性和女性因纽特儿童的头围中位数分别大 1.3 厘米和 1.5 厘米。使用 WHO 生长曲线,大头畸形的诊断显著增加,小头畸形的诊断显著减少(<0.001)。
我们的研究结果支持以下观察结果,即努纳武特的因纽特儿童的头围大于其他人群,因此使用 WHO 图表可能会导致大头畸形的过度诊断和小头畸形的漏诊。应考虑为因纽特儿童制定特定人群的生长曲线,以便及时和适当地诊断小头畸形,并避免过度调查大头畸形。