As growth references for achondroplasia are limited to reports from United States, Japan, Argentina, and Australia, the aim of this study was to construct growth references for height, weight, head circumference, and body mass index (BMI) from a European cohort of children with achondroplasia and to discuss the development of these anthropometric variables. A mix of cross-sectional and longitudinal, retrospective, and prospective data from 466 children with achondroplasia and 4,375 measuring occasions were modeled with generalized additive model for location, scale and shape (GAMLSS) to sex-specific references for ages 0 to 20 years. Loss in height position, that is, reduction in height standard deviation scores, occurred mainly during first 2 years of life while pubertal growth seemed normal if related to adult height. Adult height was 132 cm in boys and 124 cm in girls with a variability comparable to that of the general population and seems to be remarkably similar in most studies of children with achondroplasia. BMI had a syndrome-specific development that was not comparable to BMI development in the general population. Weight and BMI might be misleading when evaluating, for example, metabolic health in achondroplasia. Head circumference reached adult head size earlier than in the general population. Increased tempo of head circumference growth necessitates thus close clinical follow-up during first postnatal years.
The constructed reference growth curves are a start for following secular trends in Colombia and are also in the presented layout an optimal clinical tool for health care.
The aims of this study was to construct references for sitting height, leg length, arm span, relative sitting height (sitting height/height), and foot length and to discuss the development for these anthropometric variables in achondroplasia. Sex-specific references covering ±2 SD are presented for ages 2-20 years. Legs and arms in achondroplasia are already at 2 years of age considerably shorter than in the general population and this deviation increases with age. At adult ages, legs are almost 50% shorter than in the general population and arm span roughly 35% shorter. As sitting height is only mildly affected, relative sitting height position develops far beyond normal ranges. Foot length is also not as affected as limbs.
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Clinical surveillance of infants and children with achondroplasia necessitates syndrome‐specific charts due to extreme short stature with deviating body proportions. Height, arm span and leg length develop far below normal population ranges. We present growth and body proportion charts for ages 0–20 years, constructed from semi‐longitudinal standardized measurements of about 450 children, along with some examples of achondroplasia typical and atypical growth pattern. We combine head circumference, height and weight for 0–4 years into one (infancy) page and height and weight for 4–20 years in another (childhood–adolescence) using nonlinear axes to account for the rapidly decreasing growth velocity. Similarly, weight and BMI are based on nonlinear axes to balance wide SD‐channels at higher and narrow SD‐channels at lower levels of weight/BMI. Charts for following sitting height, sitting height/height ratio, arm span, leg and foot length are also presented. Clinical examples illustrating the applicability of the charts include cases of extreme prematurity, extreme head circumference development before and after shunting, achondroplasia complicated by chromosomal or additional genetic abnormality and by growth hormone deficiency as well as of evaluating growth promoting therapy.
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