Latest News

New pediatrics growth charts better reflect severe obesity


 

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued extended growth charts to help doctors and researchers better understand patterns of development for the most overweight children and adolescents.

In 2017-2018, more than 4.5 million U.S. youth met the criteria for severe obesity – defined as 120% of the 95th percentile, or 35 kg/m2 or greater – according to the CDC.

The new growth charts will not replace the current charts but extend beyond the 97th percentile for body mass index. Formerly, data were extrapolated for anything over the 95th percentile based on evidence from 1963 to 1980, when obesity rates were lower.

The extended growth charts are based on data collected between 1988 and 2015 from young children and adolescents with obesity.

Experts said the expanded charts will allow researchers and clinicians to track the effects of interventions for obesity whether they involve an increase in physical activity, a decrease in consumption, or other interventions. The corresponding z-score charts also are provided.

Physicians should still use the CDC’s BMI-for-age growth charts from 2000 for pediatric patients with BMIs under the 95th percentile. The agency said it does not intend to update those charts.

The definitions of overweight, obesity, and severe obesity remain unchanged.

Recommended Reading

Patients trying to lose weight overestimate their diet quality
MDedge Pediatrics
Highly processed foods ‘as addictive’ as tobacco
MDedge Pediatrics
Rates of health care use after bariatric surgery in teens
MDedge Pediatrics
Obesity tied to worse brain health in children
MDedge Pediatrics
Green Mediterranean diet lowers visceral adipose tissue
MDedge Pediatrics
Youths have strong opinions on language about body weight
MDedge Pediatrics
Everyone wins when losers get paid
MDedge Pediatrics
Cold water immersion can have benefits
MDedge Pediatrics
Cancer researcher banned from federal funding for faking data in nearly 400 images in 16 grant applications
MDedge Pediatrics
Not all children with type 2 diabetes have obesity
MDedge Pediatrics