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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Eur Respir J. 2015 Oct 22;46(6):1662–1671. doi: 10.1183/13993003.00415-2015

Table 3.

Differences in FEV1 and FVC z-scores (GLI-White) by ethnicity relative to White subjects, partially and fully adjusted for sex, age and anthropometry (N = 2751)*.

Adjusted for
sex, age, Ht sex, age, Ht, SHt sex, age, Ht, SHt, ChW
z-FEV1
Black −1.32 (−1.4; −1.2) −1.17 (−1.3; −1.1) −1.18 (−1.3; −1.1)
South Asian −0.89 (−1.0; −0.8) −0.77 (−0.9; −0.7) −0.76 (−0.9; −0.7)
Other/ mixed −0.51 (−0.6; −0.4) −0.46 (−0.6; −0.3) −0.47 (−0.6; −0.3)
BIC; df 6277; 9 6218; 10 6183; 11
z-FVC
Black −1.27 (−1.4; −1.2) −1.09 (−1.2; −1) −1.11 (−1.2; −1)
South Asian −0.95 (−1.0; −0.9) −0.80 (−0.9; −0.7) −0.80 (−0.9; −0.7)
Other/ mixed −0.47 (−0.6; −0.3) −0.42 (−0.5; −0.3) −0.43 (−0.5; −0.3)
BIC; df 6188; 9 6101; 10 5993; 11

Data presented as β-coefficient (95% Confidence Interval), derived from modelling;

*

Analyses based on data from 2751 occasions with full anthropometric data. Abbreviations: Ht: height, SHt: sitting height, ChW: chest width, BIC: Bayesian information criterion, df: degrees of freedom. After further adjusting for sitting height, ethnic differences in zFEV1 and zFVC were further reduced by 11% and 14% respectively in Black-African origin children, by 13% and 16% respectively in South-Asian children and by 10% and 11% respectively in “Other/Mixed” ethnicity children.