Ballard/Dubowitz exam
New Ballard Score, expanded to include extremely premature
infants.
Ballard JL, Khoury JC, Wedig K,
Wang L,
Eilers-Walsman BL,
Lipp R.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, OH
45267-0541.
The Ballard Maturational Score was refined and expanded to achieve greater
accuracy and to include extremely premature neonates. To test validity,
accuracy, interrater reliability, and optimal postnatal age at examination, the
resulting New Ballard Score (NBS) was assessed for 578 newly born infants and
the results were analyzed. Gestational ages ranged from 20 to 44 weeks and
postnatal ages at examination ranged from birth to 96 hours. In 530 infants,
gestational age by last menstrual period was confirmed by agreement within 2
weeks with gestational age by prenatal ultrasonography (C-GLMP). For these
infants, correlation between gestational age by NBS and C-GLMP was 0.97. Mean
differences between gestational age by NBS and C-GLMP were 0.32 +/- 1.58 weeks
and 0.15 +/- 1.46 weeks among the extremely premature infants (less than 26
weeks) and among the total population, respectively. Correlations between the
individual criteria and C-GLMP ranged from 0.72 to 0.82. Interrater reliability
of NBS, as determined by correlation between raters who rated the same subgroup
of infants, ws 0.95. For infants less than 26 weeks of gestational age, the
greatest validity (97% within 2 weeks of C-GLMP) was seen when the examination
was performed before 12 hours of postnatal age. For infants at least 26 weeks of
gestational age, percentages of agreement with C-GLMP remained constant,
averaging 92% for all postnatal age categories up to 96 hours. The NBS is a
valid and accurate gestational assessment tool for extremely premature infants
and remains valid for the entire newborn infant population.