Loading…

Differential classification of infants in United States neonatal intensive care units for weight, length, and head circumference by United States and international growth curves

Clinicians and researchers use a variety of intrauterine growth curves to classify NICU infants as small (SGA), appropriate (AGA), or large for gestational age (LGA). Since curve creation methods and samples vary, SGA/AGA/LGA cut-offs and resulting subgroups of infants vary among curves and impact o...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of human biology 2020-08, Vol.47 (6), p.564-571
Main Authors: Ferguson, A. Nicole, Olsen, Irene E., Clark, Reese H., Yockey, Bryan D., Boardman, Jonathan, Biron, Kyle, Jannuzzo, Cooper, Waskiewicz, Daniel, Mendoza, Amanda, Lawson, M. Louise
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Clinicians and researchers use a variety of intrauterine growth curves to classify NICU infants as small (SGA), appropriate (AGA), or large for gestational age (LGA). Since curve creation methods and samples vary, SGA/AGA/LGA cut-offs and resulting subgroups of infants vary among curves and impact outcome study findings - limiting generalisability. Determine how two international and two US-specific curves classified US NICU infants. Classified 192,888 infants from US NICUs (2013-2016) as SGA or LGA for birthweight, length, and head circumference, using the international Fenton and INTERGROWTH-21st curves and US-specific Olsen and Lubchenco (historical) curves. Modern curves classified approximately 10% of infants as SGA up to 32 weeks, but older infants had increased variability. The INTERGROWTH-21st curves consistently had rates above 10% for LGA after 32 weeks. While Olsen and Fenton both fit, the Olsen curves had overall best-fit for our sample of US NICU infants. The INTERGROWTH-21st curves fit the definitions for SGA and LGA for younger ages, but inferences outside of these definitions are unwarranted due to limited sample size. The INTERGROWTH-21st sample used for 33 weeks and older infants was physically smaller at the upper percentiles than our sample of US infants.
ISSN:0301-4460
1464-5033
DOI:10.1080/03014460.2020.1817555