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Validation of the global lung initiative 2012 multi-ethnic spirometric reference equations in healthy urban Zimbabwean 7-13 year-old school children: a cross-sectional observational study

Authors :
Andrea M. Rehman
Simba Rusakaniko
Rashida A. Ferrand
Engi F. Attia
Tafadzwa Madanhire
Elopy Sibanda
Source :
BMC Pulmonary Medicine, BMC Pulmonary Medicine, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2020)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background The 2012 Global Lung Function Initiative (GLI2012) provide multi-ethnic spirometric reference equations (SRE) for the 3–95 year-old age range, but Sub-Saharan African populations are not represented. This study aimed to evaluate the fit of the African-American GLI2012 SRE to a population of healthy urban and peri-urban Zimbabwean school-going children (7–13 years). Methods Spirometry and anthropometry were performed on black-Zimbabwean children recruited from three primary schools in urban and peri-urban Harare, with informed consent and assent. Individuals with a history or current symptoms of respiratory disease or with a body mass index-z score (BMI) 2012 SRE, which adjust for age, sex, ethnicity and height, after considering all GLI2012 modules. Anthropometry z-scores were generated using the British (1990) reference equations which adjust for age and sex. The African-American GLI2012 z-score distribution for the four spirometry measurements (FVC, FEV1, FEV1/FVC and MMEF) were evaluated across age, height, BMI and school (as a proxy for socioeconomic status) to assess for bias. Comparisons between the African-American GLI2012 SRE and Polgar equations (currently adopted in Zimbabwe) on the percent-predicted derived values were also performed. Results The validation dataset contained acceptable spirometry data from 712 children (344 girls, mean age: 10.5 years (SD 1.81)). The spirometry z-scores were reasonably normally distributed, with all means lower than zero but within the range of ±0.5, indicating a good fit to the African-American GLI2012 SRE. The African-American GLI2012 SRE produced z-scores closest to a normal distribution. Z-scores of girls deviated more than boys. Weak correlations (Pearson’s correlation coefficient 2012 SRE provided a better fit for Zimbabwean paediatric spirometry data than Polgar equations. Conclusion The use of African-American GLI2012 SRE in this population could help in the interpretation of pulmonary function tests.

Details

ISSN :
14712466
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC pulmonary medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d1063a33db945fd2a860058a5997ed3d