Interpretation of pediatric lung function: Impact of ethnicity
Interpretation of pediatric lung function: Impact of ethnicity
Rationale To evaluate the appropriateness of spirometric and plethysmographic reference equations in healthy young children according to ethnic origin. Methods Spirometry data were collated in 400 healthy children (214 Black and 186 White) aged 6-12 years. Of these children, 68 Black and 115 White children also undertook plethysmography. Results were expressed as percent predicted according to commonly used equations for spirometry and plethysmography. Results Black children had lower lung function for a given height compared to White children. The magnitude and direction of these differences varied according to specific outcome. In the studied age range (6-12 years) the ethnic-specific Wang equations were adequate for spirometry (mean results approximating 100% predicted in both ethnic groups). By contrast, significant differences were found between observed and % predicted plethysmographic lung volumes according to published equations derived from White children: Among the Black children, function residual capacity (FRC) and total lung capacity (TLC) were on average, 14 and 6% lower than predicted, whereas mean residual volume (RV) and RV/TLC were 4 and 10% higher. Among White children, the Rosenthal equations gave the best fit, with the exception of FRC which was, on average, 9% lower than predicted. Conclusion Spirometry equations may suffice in Black children; however, interpretation of static lung volumes in Black children is limited due to inappropriate reference equations. More appropriate plethysmographic reference equations that are applicable to all ethnic groups across the entire age range are urgently needed.
child, ethnicity, plethysmography, reference values, spirometry
20-26
Kirkby, J.
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Bonner, R.
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Lum, S.
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Bates, P.
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Morgan, V.
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Strunk, R. C.
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Kirkham, F.
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Sonnappa, S.
475dc678-6d46-4bca-8abc-e62cd211e5d3
Stocks, J.
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January 2013
Kirkby, J.
917ed93a-859e-4e98-8153-9c1ffb157afc
Bonner, R.
8d9268d1-ed76-484c-b2a7-28d0df2375ca
Lum, S.
ed76b0dd-b060-4943-8809-28da8210e13c
Bates, P.
6b3ef1ca-2cec-4376-8547-96e69b51dd36
Morgan, V.
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Strunk, R. C.
014a33a8-1e21-4ee9-8b32-2cfb453f033d
Kirkham, F.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Sonnappa, S.
475dc678-6d46-4bca-8abc-e62cd211e5d3
Stocks, J.
8641c6e6-296d-40b8-addf-e8dd0837349f
Kirkby, J., Bonner, R., Lum, S., Bates, P., Morgan, V., Strunk, R. C., Kirkham, F., Sonnappa, S. and Stocks, J.
(2013)
Interpretation of pediatric lung function: Impact of ethnicity.
Pediatric Pulmonology, 48 (1), .
(doi:10.1002/ppul.22538).
Abstract
Rationale To evaluate the appropriateness of spirometric and plethysmographic reference equations in healthy young children according to ethnic origin. Methods Spirometry data were collated in 400 healthy children (214 Black and 186 White) aged 6-12 years. Of these children, 68 Black and 115 White children also undertook plethysmography. Results were expressed as percent predicted according to commonly used equations for spirometry and plethysmography. Results Black children had lower lung function for a given height compared to White children. The magnitude and direction of these differences varied according to specific outcome. In the studied age range (6-12 years) the ethnic-specific Wang equations were adequate for spirometry (mean results approximating 100% predicted in both ethnic groups). By contrast, significant differences were found between observed and % predicted plethysmographic lung volumes according to published equations derived from White children: Among the Black children, function residual capacity (FRC) and total lung capacity (TLC) were on average, 14 and 6% lower than predicted, whereas mean residual volume (RV) and RV/TLC were 4 and 10% higher. Among White children, the Rosenthal equations gave the best fit, with the exception of FRC which was, on average, 9% lower than predicted. Conclusion Spirometry equations may suffice in Black children; however, interpretation of static lung volumes in Black children is limited due to inappropriate reference equations. More appropriate plethysmographic reference equations that are applicable to all ethnic groups across the entire age range are urgently needed.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 19 March 2012
Published date: January 2013
Keywords:
child, ethnicity, plethysmography, reference values, spirometry
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Local EPrints ID: 424261
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424261
ISSN: 8755-6863
PURE UUID: a8899bdc-d67d-47b1-b520-01ecac1315c6
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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:35
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:22
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Author:
J. Kirkby
Author:
R. Bonner
Author:
S. Lum
Author:
P. Bates
Author:
V. Morgan
Author:
R. C. Strunk
Author:
S. Sonnappa
Author:
J. Stocks
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