Hayes, Daniel J., van Buuren, Stef, ter Kuile, Feiko O., Stasinopoulos, Dimitrios, Rigby, Robert A. and Terlouw, Dianne J. (2014) Developing regional weight-for-age growth references for malaria-endemic countries to optimize age-based dosing of antimalarials. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 93. pp. 74-83. ISSN 0042-9686
Objective:
To derive regional weight-for-age growth references to help optimize age-based dosing of antimalarials in Africa, the Americas, South-East Asia and the Western Pacific.
Methods:
A weight-for-age database was constructed from pre-existing population-based anthropometric data obtained from household surveys and research groups. It contained data collected between 1995 and 2012 on 1263119 individuals (909368 female, 353751 male) older  than 14 days  and  younger than 50 years in 64 malaria-endemic  countries.  Regional  growth  references  were  generated  using  a  generalized additive model for location, scale and shape by combining data with varying distributions from a range of sources. Countries were weighted by their population at risk of malaria to enable references to be used in optimizing the dosing of antimalarials.
Findings:
Large  differences  in  weight-for-age  distributions  existed  between  the  regions  and  between  the  regions  and  global  growth  standards. For example, the average adult male from the Americas weighed 68.1kg – 6.0kg more than males in South-East Asia and the Western Pacific (average: 62.1kg). For adult women, the difference was over 10.4kg: the average was 60.4kg in the Americas and 50.0kg in South-East Asia and the Western Pacific.
Conclusion:
There  were  substantial  variations  in  weight-for-age  growth  curves  between  malaria-endemic  areas.  The  growth  reference  charts  derived  here  can  be  used  to  guide  the  evidence-based  optimization  of  aged-based  dosing  regimens  for  antimalarials  and  other  drugs often prescribed by age.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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