Open-access Estimating gestational age and its relation to the anthropometric status of newborns: a study comparing the Capurro and ultrasound methods with last menstrual period

Estimativa da idade gestacional e sua relação com o estado antropométrico em recém-nascidos: uma comparação dos métodos Capurro e ultrassonográfico com a data da última menstruação

Abstracts

OBJECTIVE: to assess the accuracy of the Capurro somatic and ultrasound methods, taking date of last menstruation as a reference point, for evaluating gestational age and anthropometric classification of term newborns. METHODS: a prevalence study was carried out involving 309 pregnant women and their term newborns, 92 of whom were small for gestational age and 217 appropriate sized for gestational age, at two public maternity hospitals in the Brazilian city of Salvador. The evaluation of the differences between the median gestational age according to the two methods was carried out using the non-parametric "Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test." The accuracy of the methods for evaluating gestational age for the small for gestational age newborns was estimated by calculating the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic) curve. RESULTS: compared to ultrasound, the Capurro method overestimated the gestational age in newbornsof less than 39 weeks and underestimated it in older newborns. Ultrasound underestimated gestational agein newborns with more than 37 weeks. CONCLUSION: ultrasound was found to have greater sensitivity for prediction of small for age newborns (96.6%), while the Capurro method presented greater specificity (75.5%). The highest accuracy was obtained using ultrasound in the 41st gestational week (ROC=77.0%).

Gestational age; Infant, Small for gestational age; Sensitivity and specificity


OBJETIVOS: avaliar a acurácia dos métodos físico de Capurro e da ultrassonografia (USG), tomandocomo referência o método da data da última menstruação (DUM), na avaliação da idade gestacional e classificação antropométrica de recém-nascidos (RN) a termo. MÉTODOS: estudo de prevalência, envolvendo 309 puérperas e seus recém-nascidos a termo, sendo 92 pequenos para idade gestacional (PIG) e 217 adequados para idade gestacional (AIG), de duas maternidades públicas de Salvador. A avaliação das diferenças entre as medianas da idade gestacional segundo os métodos foi realizada utilizando-se o teste não paramétrico "Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test." A acurácia dos métodos na avaliação da idade gestacional para o diagnóstico de RN PIG foi verificada através do cálculo da sensibilidade, especificidade, valor preditivo positivo, valor preditivo negativo e curva ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic). RESULTADOS: comparado à ultrassonografia, o método de Capurro superestimou a idade gestacional em recém-natos menores de 39 semanas e substimou a naqueles acima deste patamar. A USG substimou aidade gestacional em recém-nascidos com mais de 37 semanas. CONCLUSÕES: na predição de RN PIG, maior sensibilidade foi observada para a USG (96,6%) e maior especificidade para o Capurro (75,5%). Melhor acurácia foi observada para a USG na 41ª semana gestacional (ROC=77,0%).

Idade gestacional; Recém-nascido pequeno para a idade gestacional; Sensibilidade e Especificidade


ORIGINAL ARTICLES ARTIGOS ORIGINAIS

Estimating gestational age and its relation to the anthropometric status of newborns: a study comparing the Capurro and ultrasound methods with last menstrual period

Estimativa da idade gestacional e sua relação com o estado antropométrico em recém-nascidos: uma comparação dos métodos Capurro e ultrassonográfico com a data da última menstruação

Maria de Fátima Pussick NunesI; Sandra Maria Conceição PinheiroII; Fabíola Eloy da Rocha MedradoIII; Ana Marlúcia Oliveira AssisIV

IInstituto de Saúde Coletiva. Universidade Federal da Bahia. Rua Padre Feijó, 29, Canela. Salvador, BA, Brasil. CEP: 40110–170. Email: mfpnunes@cox.net

IICentro de Ciências Exatas e Tecnológicas. Universidade Federaldo Recôncavo da Bahia. Cruz das Almas, BA, Brasil

IIIInstituto de Perinatologia da Bahia. Salvador, BA, Brasil

IVEscola de Nutrição. Universidade Federal da Bahia. Salvador, BA, Brasil

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: to assess the accuracy of the Capurro somatic and ultrasound methods, taking date of last menstruation as a reference point, for evaluating gestational age and anthropometric classification of term newborns.

METHODS: a prevalence study was carried out involving 309 pregnant women and their term newborns, 92 of whom were small for gestational age and 217 appropriate sized for gestational age, at two public maternity hospitals in the Brazilian city of Salvador. The evaluation of the differences between the median gestational age according to the two methods was carried out using the non-parametric "Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test." The accuracy of the methods for evaluating gestational age for the small for gestational age newborns was estimated by calculating the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic) curve.

RESULTS: compared to ultrasound, the Capurro method overestimated the gestational age in newbornsof less than 39 weeks and underestimated it in older newborns. Ultrasound underestimated gestational agein newborns with more than 37 weeks.

CONCLUSION: ultrasound was found to have greater sensitivity for prediction of small for age newborns (96.6%), while the Capurro method presented greater specificity (75.5%). The highest accuracy was obtained using ultrasound in the 41st gestational week (ROC=77.0%).

Key words: Gestational age, Infant, Small for gestational age, Sensitivity and specificity

RESUMO

OBJETIVOS: avaliar a acurácia dos métodos físico de Capurro e da ultrassonografia (USG), tomandocomo referência o método da data da última menstruação (DUM), na avaliação da idade gestacional e classificação antropométrica de recém-nascidos (RN) a termo.

MÉTODOS: estudo de prevalência, envolvendo 309 puérperas e seus recém-nascidos a termo, sendo 92 pequenos para idade gestacional (PIG) e 217 adequados para idade gestacional (AIG), de duas maternidades públicas de Salvador. A avaliação das diferenças entre as medianas da idade gestacional segundo os métodos foi realizada utilizando-se o teste não paramétrico "Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test." A acurácia dos métodos na avaliação da idade gestacional para o diagnóstico de RN PIG foi verificada através do cálculo da sensibilidade, especificidade, valor preditivo positivo, valor preditivo negativo e curva ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic).

RESULTADOS: comparado à ultrassonografia, o método de Capurro superestimou a idade gestacional em recém-natos menores de 39 semanas e substimou a naqueles acima deste patamar. A USG substimou aidade gestacional em recém-nascidos com mais de 37 semanas.

CONCLUSÕES: na predição de RN PIG, maior sensibilidade foi observada para a USG (96,6%) e maior especificidade para o Capurro (75,5%). Melhor acurácia foi observada para a USG na 41ª semana gestacional (ROC=77,0%).

Palavras-chave: Idade gestacional, Recém-nascido pequeno para a idade gestacional, Sensibilidade e Especificidade

Introduction

Gestational age, measured in weeks or full days, is defined as the time that has elapsed since the first day of the last normal menstrual period (LMP).1 Along with weight at birth, this measurement is an important indicator of neonatal health.2

At present, LMP and ultrasound are the principal methods used to estimate gestational age.3-5 In situations where information on the menstrual period are difficult to obtain, such as cases of irregular menstrual cycles, bleeding after conception, and failure to remember, LMP is not a reliable way of establishing gestational age and ultrasound is the most commonly recommended method.2

More precise ultrasound measures of gestational age up to the tenth week can be obtained by measuring the length of the fetus from head to buttocks, while, up to the 20th week, measurement of the length of the femur or the biparietal diameter is the most appropriate.2,6-8 However, ultrasound examinations are not always carried out in the first twenty weeks of gestation, especially among women who began to receive prenatal care late in their pregnancy.

In the absence of ultrasound data or LMP, the Capurro somatic method9 has been used in clinical practice. Although it is widely used, few studies10-12 have evaluated the accuracy of the Capurro somatic method9 for estimating the gestational age and anthropometric parameters at birth compared with LMP and ultrasound. These studies suggest that the Capurro method under- or overestimates gestational age compared with LMP and ultrasound. Despite these limitations, the Capurro method is still commonly used in maternity hospitals, especially when other methods are not available. The use of this procedure has a direct impact on the accuracy of a diagnosis of the anthropometric status of a newborn and hence on the health conditions at birth.

In view of this, this study aims to evaluate the use of the Capurro somatic method and ultrasound, taking LMP as the point of reference, for the estimation of gestational age and anthropometrical classification of term newborns.

Methods

A cross-sectional study to validate diagnostic methods was carried out at the Climério de Oliveira public maternity hospital and at the Bahia Institute of Perinatology (IPERBA) in the city of Salvador, Brazil, between June 2005 and October 2006. The sample was made up of term newborns (>37 to <41 full weeks of gestation), excluding twins and malformed newborns. Newborns that were large for gestational age (weight > 90th) were likewise excluded from the sampling procedure.

The accuracy of the ultrasound and Capurro somatic methods for evaluation of gestational age and anthropometric status at birth was tested. The LMP method was taken as the point of reference. Given that the sample was not originally intended for this study and information on gestational age provided by the methods under study was not available for all the pregnant women, it was decided that the power of the sample for evaluating the accuracy of measurement of gestational age by each method should be calculated along with its capacity to classify the anthropometric status of newborns. Thus, for a sample of 195 newborns, for whom information on gestational age provided by LMP and Capurro was available, the following were taken into consideration: the difference between the means for the two procedures of 0.2672 (DP= 1.30) and the significance of 5%, giving a statistical power (1-β) of 94%. For evaluation of the difference between the mean gestational age provided by LMP and ultrasound, considering this difference to be 0.5456 (DP=0.98), with a significance of 5%, and a total of 114 newborns, a statistical power (1-β) of 100% was obtained. The data were collected by duly trained researchers in accordance with the criteria and procedures outlined below.

Weight at birth was obtained from the medical records. The newborns were weighed using the service's normal procedure, which consists of weighing the newborn immediately after birth, unclothed, with the umbilical clamped, using an electronic scale with a capacity of 15 kg, sensitivity calibrated at 5 g and reset for each weighing.

The gestational age was calculated in full months, according to the recommendation of the World Health Organization (WHO).2 Validation of the USG and Capurro methods was carried out, using the LMP as a point of reference, in view of its wide use as a method for evaluating gestational age at health centers.2 The information on gestational age was obtained by way of an interview and confirmed in the medical records or directly from the report provided by the pregnant woman, in cases where it did not appear in the medical records.

A gestational calendar was used to calculate the gestational age according to LMP and ultrasound. The LMP method was used with those mothers with a regular menstrual cycle (between 25 and 31 days) and date (day and month) as of the last menstrual period.2 The following ultrasound examinations were included in the study: examinations carried out before the 10th week of gestation whose gestational age had been evaluated by measuring the length from head to buttocks, or those carried out between the 11th and 20th week, where the gestational age had been evaluated by measuring the length of the femur or the biparietal diameter.2,8

The estimation of gestational age using the Capurro method was carried out by neonatologists according to the standard procedure of the health center and registered in the medical records. When this was not available, it was acquired by a duly trained individual.

The method is based on inspection in the first 12 hours of life of physical signs that are placed on a maturation scale9,10 taking into consideration the following five characteristics of the newborn: skin texture, shape of the ear, size of the mammary nodule, formation of the nipple, and the folds of the sole of the foot.

The characteristics of the newborns were recorded and weighted; adding a constant (K=204) to the sum of the various points (n). The resulting figure was divided by 7 (equivalent to the number of days in the week), to obtain the gestational age in full weeks.9

In 5% of the sample, an inter- and intra-observer reliability test for the gestational age variable using the Capurro method was carried by the interviewers, using the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC). The ICC expressed as "rho" was equal to zero, indicating slight probability of the existence of variation from one observer to another and that the measurements taken contained no bias that would affect the study.13

Anthropometric evaluation was carried out based on the information on birth weight and gestational age using the curve produced by Williams et al.14 The newborns whose weight fell within the 10th percentile of the curve were classified as small for gestational age (SGA) and those whose weight fell between the 10th and 90th percentile of the curve, were classified as appropriate sized for gestational age (AGA).

Two groups were drawn up for the purposes of statistical analysis: one comprising 195 newborns whose gestational age was estimated using the LMP and Capurro methods and another comprising 114 newborns whose gestational age was ascertained using LMP and ultrasound.

The LMP, ultrasound and Capurro methods were submitted to a normality test to see whether they exhibited a normal distribution, using mean, median and mode, arranged in histograms, by means of the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test.15 Where the variable of interest was non-normal, the median was adopted as the statistical parameter to estimate the duration of gestation. The differences between the median gestational ages were tested using the Wilcoxon SignedRankTest.16

The receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC curve)13 was used to establish the cut-off point with the greatest specificity and sensitivity for the gestational age estimation methods in diagnosis of anthropometric status at birth.

The accuracy of the Capurro and ultrasound methods for diagnosis of anthropometric status at birth (considering newborns whose weight falls below the 10th percentile to be SGA)14 was evaluated by calculating the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive value. The percentage of agreement and disagreement between the methods was also calculated using the Kappa coefficient. For these tests, alpha was set at <0.05 and the SPSS 11.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago, IL) and Stata 8 statistical software packages were used.

Results

Of the 710 newborns who met the inclusion criteria, 66 were excluded, 20 because their gestational age could not accurately be determined, 25 because they were discharged early from hospital, making it impossible to obtain data, and 21 because their mothers refused to participate. Likewise, 335 newborns whose gestational age was estimated using only one of the three methods were excluded from the study. The final sample thus comprised 309 newborns, 227 of whom (73.5%) had an estimate for gestational age using two methods and 82 (26.5%) an estimate based on all three (Figure 1).


The gestational age of seven newborns whose medical records did not contain this information (2.3% of the total sample) was estimated by the interviewers using the Capurro method. The mean weight of the AGA term newborns was 3239.5g ± 321.7g (maximum of 4010.0g and minimum of 2435.0g). For the SGA term newborns the mean weight was 2562.5±259.9g (maximum of 3000g and minimum of 1610g). A low birth weight was found in 2 (0.9%) of the AGA and 60 (65.2%) of the SGA newborns. It was also observed that most of the mothers interviewed (47.6%) were socio-economically less privileged. A significant number of them were adolescents (16.9%); 44.4% designated themselves as black and 59.9% had more than four years of schooling.

Table 1 shows the median gestational ages and their respective differences, estimated using a combination of LMP and Capurro or a combination of LMP and ultrasound. Comparison of the median gestational ages estimated using LMP and Capurro revealed that there were differences in the 37th and 38th weeks of gestation, with higher values being returned by the Capurro method. In the 39th week of gestation there were no differences in the medians calculated using the two methods. After the 40th and 41st weeks the opposite trend was observed, with LMP returning higher figures. Overall, the duration of gestation evaluated using LMP (40 GWs) and Capurro (39.5 GWs) was statistically different (p<0.001). It was also noted that this significance was due principally to the differences in the 40th and 41s t gestational weeks, this being the range within which more than half of the newborns included in this study (53.2%) fell (data not given).

For the LMP and ultrasound methods, it was found that the gestational age estimated using LMP was higher from the 38th week onwards than that calculated on the basis of ultrasound (p<0.07). The differences between the median GAs were statistically significant (p<0.001) for the full length of gestation and, in particular, for the 40th and 41st gestational weeks.

Figures 2 and 3 show the ROC curves used to define the cut-off point (with the higher specificity and sensitivity) for the ultrasound and Capurro methods for assessing the gestational age compared to the LMP for diagnosing newborns as small for gestational age. The bands between the 37th and 41st weeks were tested as cut-off points. Both the ultrasound and the Capurro methods did not show statistical significance between the 37th and 39th week of gestation (data not given). After the 40th week of gestation the areas under the ROC curve reached 64.5% for ultrasound and 52.4% for Capurro, (Figure 2), and rose to 77% and 67.2% respectively in the 41st week (Figure 3). Only at this stage, did the area become statistically significant for the ultrasound method USG (p=0.04) and this is considered to be the ideal cut-off point for this method.



Table 2 shows the accuracy of the gestational ages estimated according to the different methods for diagnosing SGA newborns, using sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value. The gestational age estimated using ultrasound showed a higher sensitivity (96.6%) CI:(93.2- 100) for detecting SGA newborns compared with that registered using Capurro (91.3%) CI: (87.0- 95,6). However, the specificity of the Capurro method (75.5%) CI:(68.9-82.1) was higher compared to the ultrasound method (64.1%) CI:(55.1-73.1). The positive predictive value was higher when the Capurro method was used (97.2%) CI:(94.7-99.7). By contrast, ultrasound revealed a proportion of 96.1% CI:(92.599.7) of true SGA (negative predictive value).

The percentage of agreement or disagreement of the LMP compared with the combinations of Capurro and LMP and ultrasound and LMP in identifying SGA newborns was also evaluated. The kappa coefficient was high both for LMP and ultrasound (Kappa=0.87) and for LMP and Capurro (Kappa=0.86). Overall, a good agreement (K>0.8) was found between ultrasound, the Capurro method and LMP; in other words, the proportion of occasions on which the methods for diagnosis of SGA agreed was high.

Discussion

This study found that, compared to LMP, the births covered by the study fell (data not given). This Capurro method overestimated the gestational age in distortion in the measurement of gestational age newborns of less than 39 weeks and overestimated it increases the chance of incorrect anthropometric in those with a higher gestational age. Ultrasound classification of newborns. Depending on the weight underestimated the gestational age of newborns with of the newborn, underestimation of gestational age more than 37 weeks. Ultrasound was found to have may lead to SGA newborns being wrongly classified greater sensitivity in the prediction of SGA as AGA, thereby impeding the adoption of procenewborns and the Capurro method greater speci-dures important for the health of these children. The ficity. The best cut-off point for ultrasound was opposite situation leads to unnecessary costs for found to be the 41st week of gestation. health services.

Comparison of the median gestational ages esti-The results found in this study are for term mated using the Capurro method, taking the LMP newborns alone and the scope for comparison is thus method as the point of reference revealed that the limited. However, they are broadly in accordance former overestimated the gestational age in with the findings of Panvini et al.,11 who also newborns with less than 39 weeks of gestation and showed that the Capurro method tends to underestiunderestimated it in newborns with more than 39 mate the gestational age of newborns with more than weeks. This difference between the medians became 39 weeks of gestation and to overestimate it for newborns with fewer than 39 weeks. The poor accuracy of the Capurro method in estimating gestational age, compared to the LMP method has also been reported by other researchers.10-12 According to Gladys et al.12 this method tends to underestimate gestational age in preterm newborns and to overestimate it in post-term newborns, when compared with the age calculated using LMP and ultrasound.

In the present study a similar tendency to underestimate gestational age was found for the ultrasound method, taking LMP as the point of reference, in newborns with a gestational age of over 39 weeks. Some studies that have compared these two methods for estimating gestational age have found a similar tendency for ultrasound to underestimate gestational age.6,7,17 According to Taipale & Hiilesmaa6, even when carried out before the 20th week of gestation, ultrasound registers lower gestational ages than the LMP method, thereby leading to an increase in the estimate for preterm births.17 In the present study, however, the lower percentage of mothers undergoing ultrasound before the 20th week restricted the size of the sample for this group, which may have affected the robustness of the results. However, recent studies3-5 also suggest discrepancies in gestational age as estimated using these two methods and present alternative data analysis procedures as a way of reducing the number of such discrepancies.

The information given in Figures 2 and 3 shows that, in the 41st week of gestation, ultrasound has a discriminatory power similar to that of LMP for estimation of gestational age, at which point the area of the ROC curve becomes significant (77%;p=0.04) and comparable to that which would be produced by LMP in a hypothetical situation. In view of this, it can be supposed that the best cut-off point for estimating gestational age using the ultrasound method is the 41st week of gestation.

The data in Table 2 show that the sensitivity of the ultrasound (96.6%) and Capurro methods compared to LMP can be considered high for diagnosis of SGA in newborns. Analysis of the power of the two methods to discriminate true non-cases (AGA newborns) shows, however, that the Capurro method has greater discriminatory power (with a specificity of 75.5%) compared to USG (specificity of 64.1%). Complementary analysis shows the Capurro method to perform even better for correctly diagnosing truly SGA newborns (VPP=97.2%) compared to ultrasound (VPP=83.9%); suggesting that Capurro can play a role in reaching a correct diagnosis of SGA in nine out of every ten newborns. On the other hand, ultrasound succeeded in producing a correct diagnosis in nine out often non-SGA newborns (VPN=96.1%); while the Capurro method was successful in eight out of every ten cases (VPN=80%).

The findings of the present study suggest that ultrasound was a better predictor of gestational age and anthropometric conditions at birth compared to the Capurro somatic method. However, if it is to be used by health services, adequate validation measures need to be taken and the ultrasound should be carried out before the 20th week of gestation.2 However, a certain proportion of pregnant women still start prenatal care late. According to data gathered by the National Demographics and Health Survey on women and children (PNDS) in 200618 in Brazil, 82.5% of women begin prenatal care in the first trimester of pregnancy, and this percentage is lower in the North region (78.5%) and in the Northeast (73.9%). In this study, however, only 24.1% of the mothers had undergone ultrasound prior to the 20th week of gestation and this restricts the use of this method for evaluating gestational age at obstetrics units and consequently the diagnosis of anthropometric conditions at birth.

The Capurro somatic method, despite having received criticism with regard to its validity for estimating gestational age,10-12 is often the only option available for post-natal estimation of gestational age and it is recommended that it be used with caution in such situations.

The limitations of the study include the fact that the sample only included term newborns, thereby restricting broader comparison between pre- and post-term births. A second limitation was the use of ultrasound and Capurro test results recorded on medical records filled in by different health professionals, which may have given rise to inter-observer bias. A further limitation was the fact that a considerable percentage of mothers were excluded because the gestational age of their children had been evaluated using only one method, especially when this was ultrasound, thereby restricting the size of the sample. Furthermore, each method is known to have its own inherent limitations, which this study attempted to minimize by adopting inclusion criteria and procedures to ensure external validation.

However, in view of the lack of consensus as to the best method for estimating the standard gestational age and the inherent limitations of each, it is perhaps reasonable to argue that evaluation of the state of health and nutrition at birth should include both parameters that estimate the length of gestation and those that include anthropocentric conditions at birth. This suggestion requires further study.19 Nevertheless, it is fair to say that the methods currently used to estimate gestational age do not cover these two areas and are more accurate in estimating one than the other, thereby giving rise to disparities between the measurement of gestational age and the anthropometric parameters at birth.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq), for financial support by way of a study grant; the neonatologist, Dr. Patrícia Mendes, for her trainingin the use of the Capurro method; the statistician, Carlos Teles, for his help with data analysis; and the directors of the IPERBA and Climério de Oliveira in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, for greatly facilitating the collection of data.

Recebido em 6 de janeiro de 2010

Versão final apresentada em 14 de dezembro de 2010

Aprovado em 18 de janeiro de 2011

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    19 Apr 2011
  • Date of issue
    Mar 2011

History

  • Received
    06 Jan 2010
  • Accepted
    18 Jan 2011
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