Estimating the weight of ethnically diverse children attending an Australian emergency department: a prospective, blinded, comparison of age-based and length-based tools including Mercy, PAWPER and Broselow

Journal article


O'Leary, Fenton, John-Denny, Blessy, McGarvey, Kathryn, Hann, Alexandra, Pegiazoglou, Ioannis and Peat, Jennifer. (2017). Estimating the weight of ethnically diverse children attending an Australian emergency department: a prospective, blinded, comparison of age-based and length-based tools including Mercy, PAWPER and Broselow. Archives of Disease in Childhood. 102(1), pp. 46 - 52. https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2016-310917
AuthorsO'Leary, Fenton, John-Denny, Blessy, McGarvey, Kathryn, Hann, Alexandra, Pegiazoglou, Ioannis and Peat, Jennifer
Abstract

Objective To prospectively compare the actual weights of Australian children in an ethnically diverse metropolitan setting with the predicted weights using the Paediatric Advanced Weight Prediction in the Emergency Room (PAWPER) tape, Broselow tape, Mercy system and calculated weights using the updated Advanced Paediatric Life Support (APLS), Luscombe and Owens and Best Guess formulae. Methods A prospective, cross-sectional, observational, blinded, convenience study conducted at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead Paediatric Emergency Department in Sydney, Australia. Comparisons were made using Bland-Altman plots, mean difference, limits of agreement and estimated weight within 10% and 20% of actual weight. Results 199 patients were enrolled in the study with a mean actual weight of 27.2 kg (SD 17.2). Length-based tools, with or without body habitus adjustment, performed better than age-based formulae. When measuring estimated weight within 10% of actual weight, PAWPER performed best with 73%, followed by Mercy (69%), PAWPER with no adjustment (62%), Broselow (60%), Best Guess (47%), Luscombe and Owens (41%) and revised APLS (40%). Mean difference was similar across all methods ranging from 0.4 kg (0.0, 0.9) for Mercy to −2.2 kg (−3.5, −0.9) for revised APLS. Limits of agreement were narrower for the lengthbased tools (−5.9, 6.8 Mercy; −8.3, 5.6 Broselow; −9.0, 7.1 PAWPER adjusted; −12.1, 9.2 PAWPER unadjusted) than the age-based formulae (−18.6, 17.4 Best Guess; −19.4, 15.1 revised APLS, −21.8, 17.7 Luscombe and Owens). Conclusion In an ethnically diverse population, lengthbased methods with or without body habitus modification are superior to age-based methods for predicting actual body weight. Body habitus modifications increase the accuracy and precision slightly.

Year2017
JournalArchives of Disease in Childhood
Journal citation102 (1), pp. 46 - 52
PublisherBMJ Publishing Group
ISSN0003-9888
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2016-310917
Scopus EID2-s2.0-84994884970
Open accessOpen access
Page range46 - 52
Publisher's version
License
Place of publicationUnited Kingdom
EditorsR. M. Beattie
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