World variation in head circumference for children from birth to 5 years and a comparison with the WHO standards

Author:

Hui Lai LingORCID,Ho Frederick KORCID,Wright Charlotte MargaretORCID,Cole Tim JORCID,Lam Hugh SimonORCID,Deng Han-BingORCID,So Hung-KwanORCID,Ip PatrickORCID,Nelson E Anthony SORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveA recent review reported that the WHO 2006 growth standards reflect a smaller head circumference at 24 months than seen in 18 countries. Whether this happens in early infancy and to what extent populations differ is not clear. This scooping review aimed to estimate the rates of children in different populations identified as macrocephalic or microcephalic by WHO standards.MethodsWe reviewed population-representative head circumference-for-age references. For each reference, we calculated the percentages of head circumferences that would be classified as microcephalic (<3rd WHO centile) or macrocephalic (>97th WHO centile) at selected ages.ResultsTwelve references from 11 countries/regions (Belgium, China, Ethiopia, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Norway, Saudi Arabia, UK and USA) were included. Median head circumference was larger than that for the Multicentre Growth Reference Study populations in both sexes in all these populations except for Japanese and Chinese children aged 1 month and Indians. Overall, at 12/24 months, 8%–9% children would be classified as macrocephalic and 2% would be classified as microcephalic, compared with the expected 3%. However at 1 month, there were geographic differences in the rate of macrocephaly (6%–10% in Europe vs 1%–2% in Japan and China) and microcephaly (1%–3% vs 6%–14%, respectively).ConclusionsExcept for Indians and some Asian neonates, adopting the WHO head circumference standards would overdiagnose macrocephaly and underdiagnose microcephaly. Local population-specific cut-offs or references are more appropriate for many populations. There is a need to educate healthcare professionals about the limitations of the WHO head circumference standards.

Funder

Health and Medical Research Fund

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Do the WHO head circumference standards underestimate microcephaly?;Archivos Argentinos de Pediatria;2024-02-01

2. ¿Los estándares de perímetro cefálico de la OMS subestiman la microcefalia?;Archivos Argentinos de Pediatria;2024-02-01

3. A Study on the Right to Protection and Promotion of the Children Living in the Streets of India;International Journal of Advanced Research in Science, Communication and Technology;2023-06-29

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