Abstract
AbstractINTRODUCTIONSwitzerland has an ongoing debate about the appropriateness of national growth reference curves. The Swiss Society of Pediatrics currently recommends the growth references of the World Health Organization (WHO), while the Center for Pediatric Endocrinology Zurich has proposed alternative growth references based on local data. Specialists and researchers also use International Obesity Task Force (IOTF) references to define overweight and obesity. We investigated the fit of these three growth references to anthropometric measurements from schoolchildren in the canton of Zurich and assessed the prevalence of overweight, obesity, and short stature across the three references.METHODSWe analyzed data from 3755 children aged 6-17 years of the cross sectional LuftiBus in the school (LUIS) study, collected between 2013-2016 in the canton of Zurich. We calculated z-scores of height, weight, and body mass index (BMI) based on WHO, local, and IOTF references. We compared the mean and distribution of z-scores to the expected standard normal distribution using the Anderson-Darling test. We classified BMI based on cutoff values given by the three references: overweight (WHO: >90.0thpercentile; local: >82.9[girls], >78.9[boys]; IOTF: >89.3[girls], >90.5[boys]), and obesity (WHO: >97.0; local: >96.8[girls], >95.5[boys]; IOTF: >98.6[girls], >98.9[boys]). We defined short stature as <3rdpercentile of height-for-age.RESULTSThe mean z-scores in LUIS were 0.56 for height, 0.28 for weight, and 0.06 for BMI based on WHO references; 0.15 for height, 0.06 for weight, and -0.01 for BMI based on local references; and 0.19 for BMI based on IOTF references. WHO references provided a worse fit to the LUIS children than local references. Anderson-Darling goodness of fit A2was 578.1 (WHO) vs. 48.1 (local) for height and 124.0 vs. 10.0 for weight, with lower values indicating better fit. WHO (A2: 24.3) and local references (A2: 0.8) fit the BMI of LUIS children better than IOTF (A2: 64.1). The WHO classified fewer children as overweight than the local and IOTF references (WHO: 9% vs. local: 15% vs. IOTF: 13%) but more children as obese (6% vs. 4% vs. 3%). The WHO defined fewer children as being of short stature than the local references (1% vs. 3%).CONCLUSIONSOur findings suggest that anthropometric data of schoolchildren in Zurich differ notably from WHO and IOTF references potentially leading to misclassification of overweight, obesity, and short stature. Nationally representative and longitudinally collected data are needed to develop new Swiss growth references.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory