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Pratique

Predicted Body Weight (Ventilation)

Predicted Body Weight (Devine) + Tidal Volume

cm

Biological sex

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Qu'est-ce que Predicted Body Weight (Ventilation)?

Predicted Body Weight (PBW), also known as Ideal Body Weight (IBW), is a calculated weight that represents the expected weight of a person of a given height and sex, regardless of their actual weight. It is critically important in clinical medicine — particularly in mechanical ventilation and drug dosing — because many physiological parameters (lung size, tidal volume, renal tubular function) correlate with height rather than actual body weight. The Devine formula, published in 1974, is the most widely used PBW formula in clinical practice: for males, PBW (kg) = 50 + 2.3 × (height in inches − 60); for females, PBW (kg) = 45.5 + 2.3 × (height in inches − 60). An equivalent centimetre-based formula uses 0.91 instead of 2.3 per inch: males = 50 + 0.91 × (height in cm − 152.4); females = 45.5 + 0.91 × (height in cm − 152.4). PBW is most critically applied in mechanical ventilation: lung-protective ventilation protocols for ARDS (ARDSNet) mandate a tidal volume of 6 mL/kg PBW (with acceptable range 4–8 mL/kg PBW) because the lungs of obese patients are not larger than those of normal-weight individuals at the same height. Using actual body weight in obese patients would deliver excessively large tidal volumes, causing ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) through volutrauma and barotrauma. PBW is also used for medication dosing for drugs distributed in lean body mass (aminoglycosides, digoxin, vancomycin loading doses), and for nutritional calculations where overfeeding of obese critically ill patients is a recognised risk.

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Formule

f(x)PBW Male (kg) = 50 + 2.3 × (Height(in) − 60); PBW Female (kg) = 45.5 + 2.3 × (Height(in) − 60); Or: Male = 50 + 0.91 × (Height(cm) − 152.4); Female = 45.5 + 0.91 × (Height(cm) − 152.4)

Légende des variables

SymboleNomUnitéDescription
PBWPredicted Body WeightkgExpected weight for patient's height and sex using Devine formula
TVTidal VolumemLVolume of air delivered with each mechanical breath; target 6 mL/kg PBW
PplatPlateau PressurecmH2OAirway pressure measured at end-inspiration with no flow; reflects lung compliance; target <30 cmH2O
AdjBWAdjusted Body WeightkgBody weight correcting for partial distribution of drugs into adipose tissue: PBW + 0.4 × (actual − PBW)

Comment Predicted Body Weight (Ventilation)

  1. 1Measure patient height accurately (in cm or convert to inches: cm ÷ 2.54).
  2. 2Identify patient sex (male or female — the formula differs by 4.5 kg at the intercept).
  3. 3Apply the Devine formula: Male PBW = 50 + 2.3 × (height_inches − 60); Female PBW = 45.5 + 2.3 × (height_inches − 60).
  4. 4For heights below 152 cm (60 inches), the formula gives values below 50/45.5 kg; use clinical judgement for very short patients.
  5. 5Use PBW to calculate mechanical ventilation tidal volume: TV = 6 mL/kg PBW (range 4–8 mL/kg for lung-protective ventilation).
  6. 6Set initial ventilator tidal volume at 6 mL/kg PBW; check plateau pressure (target <30 cmH2O) and adjust as needed.
  7. 7For obese patients (actual weight much higher than PBW), always use PBW for ventilator settings and lean-body-mass drug dosing.

Exemples résolus

Exemple 1Ventilator tidal volume for obese ARDS patient
Donné:Male, height 175 cm, actual weight 120 kg (obese), ARDS requiring mechanical ventilation
Résultat:PBW = 50 + 0.91 × (175 − 152.4) = 50 + 20.6 = 70.6 kg; Tidal volume = 6 × 70.6 = 424 mL; NOT 720 mL (6 × actual weight)

Using actual weight would deliver 70% more tidal volume — a major cause of VILI

An obese patient has the same lung size as a non-obese person of the same height. Setting tidal volume on PBW prevents volutrauma.

Exemple 2PBW for female patient
Donné:Female, height 163 cm (64.2 inches), actual weight 85 kg
Résultat:PBW = 45.5 + 2.3 × (64.2 − 60) = 45.5 + 9.66 = 55.2 kg; Tidal volume = 6 × 55.2 = 331 mL

If actual weight used: TV would be 510 mL — inappropriately high

A female patient at 163 cm has a PBW of approximately 55 kg regardless of her actual weight of 85 kg.

Exemple 3Aminoglycoside dosing using PBW
Donné:Male, height 180 cm, actual weight 110 kg (obese), prescribing gentamicin
Résultat:PBW = 50 + 0.91 × (180 − 152.4) = 75.1 kg; Dosing weight = PBW + 0.4 × (actual − PBW) = 75.1 + 0.4 × 34.9 = 89.1 kg; Gentamicin 5–7 mg/kg = 446–624 mg once daily

For obese patients, aminoglycoside dosing uses 'adjusted body weight' = PBW + 40% of excess weight

Aminoglycosides distribute partially into adipose tissue; adjusted body weight accounts for this partial distribution into fat.

Exemple 4Plateau pressure check and tidal volume reduction
Donné:Male, PBW 72 kg, initial TV set at 6 mL/kg = 432 mL, plateau pressure 34 cmH2O
Résultat:Plateau pressure >30 cmH2O — reduce TV to 4 mL/kg PBW = 288 mL; accept permissive hypercapnia if needed

Target plateau pressure <30 cmH2O; minimum TV 4 mL/kg PBW per ARDSNet protocol

Even at 6 mL/kg PBW, some patients with stiff lungs (low compliance) will have high plateau pressures. Reduce tidal volume further to protect lungs.

Applications pratiques

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Mechanical ventilation: calculating tidal volume (6 mL/kg PBW) for lung-protective ARDS ventilation per ARDSNet protocol., where accurate predicted body weight analysis through the Predicted Body Weight supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows

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Aminoglycoside dosing: gentamicin, tobramycin, amikacin — using PBW or adjusted body weight in obese patients., where accurate predicted body weight analysis through the Predicted Body Weight supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows

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Vancomycin loading dose calculation in morbidly obese patients., where accurate predicted body weight analysis through the Predicted Body Weight supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows across diverse organizational contexts and analytical requirements

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Caloric goal setting for enteral and parenteral nutrition in critically ill obese patients to avoid overfeeding., where accurate predicted body weight analysis through the Predicted Body Weight supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows

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Pharmacist-guided drug dosing calculations for chemotherapy, neuromuscular blocking agents, and other body-size-dependent medications.

Cas particuliers

Morbid Obesity and PBW

In morbidly obese patients (BMI >40), the difference between PBW and actual weight may exceed 50–100 kg. Setting tidal volume on actual weight in these patients could double or triple the safe tidal volume. PBW is non-negotiable for ventilator tidal volume calculation in obese patients. However, PEEP selection in obese ARDS patients often needs to be higher than standard protocols to counteract the increased chest wall weight of abdominal adipose tissue.

Pregnancy and PBW

Pregnant patients gain significant weight during pregnancy (10–15 kg on average), of which a variable amount is lean mass (uterus, fetus, placenta, amniotic fluid) versus fat. For drug dosing in pregnancy, specific pharmacokinetic guidance for each drug is essential. For ventilation of pregnant patients in ARDS, PBW based on pre-pregnancy height is still the appropriate tidal volume reference.

Paediatric PBW

Paediatric PBW is calculated differently from adult formulas. Common paediatric approximations: (Age × 2) + 8 for children 1–12 years (weight in kg). Alternatively, the 50th percentile weight from standardised growth charts for the child's age and sex is used as the reference for drug dosing and ventilation. Paediatric ARDS ventilation also targets 6 mL/kg ideal weight.

Underweight Patients

When actual body weight is less than PBW (underweight or cachectic patients), use actual body weight rather than PBW for ventilation and drug dosing — PBW would overestimate the appropriate dose or tidal volume. Clinical pharmacist review is essential for drug dosing in severely cachectic patients, particularly for chemotherapy, where underdosing may compromise efficacy.

PBW Quick Reference by Height (Devine Formula)

Height (cm)PBW Male (kg)PBW Female (kg)Tidal Volume 6 mL/kg — MaleTidal Volume 6 mL/kg — Female
15552.347.8314 mL287 mL
16056.952.4341 mL314 mL
16561.456.9368 mL342 mL
17065.961.4396 mL369 mL
17570.566.0423 mL396 mL
18075.070.5450 mL423 mL
18579.575.1477 mL451 mL

Questions fréquentes

Q

Why not use actual body weight for tidal volume setting?

A

Lung size correlates with height, not weight. An obese patient at 175 cm has essentially the same lung volume (functional residual capacity) as a lean patient at 175 cm. If tidal volume is set on actual body weight in an obese patient, the lungs receive a much larger volume per breath than they can safely accommodate, causing ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) through overdistension of already-compromised alveoli.

Q

What is the ARDSNet protocol for lung-protective ventilation?

A

The ARDSNet (ARMA trial, 2000) protocol set tidal volume at 6 mL/kg PBW, with a target plateau pressure ≤30 cmH2O. If plateau pressure exceeds 30 cmH2O, the tidal volume is reduced in 1 mL/kg steps to a minimum of 4 mL/kg PBW. This strategy reduced 28-day mortality from 39.8% (12 mL/kg traditional ventilation) to 31.0% — one of the most significant outcomes improvements in the history of critical care.

Q

Is PBW the same as IBW?

A

PBW and IBW are often used interchangeably in clinical practice and reference the same Devine formula. Strictly, the term 'ideal body weight' has fallen out of favour as it implies a value judgement. 'Predicted body weight' or 'lean body weight' better captures the physiological rationale — this is the body weight the person would have if they had a normal BMI for their height.

Q

What if the patient is shorter than 152 cm (60 inches)?

A

The Devine formula was developed from data on adults and performs less reliably at very short statures. For patients below 152 cm, the formula can give negative values below 152 cm by more than a few centimetres, which is clinically nonsensical. In very short patients, use clinical judgement, consult paediatric dosing references if applicable, or use alternative formulas such as the Miller formula, which handles extremes of height better.

Q

How is PBW used in nutritional support?

A

For obese critically ill patients, caloric goals in enteral or parenteral nutrition should be based on PBW (or adjusted body weight) rather than actual weight, to avoid overfeeding. Overfeeding in critically ill patients causes hyperglycaemia, hyperlipidaemia, excess CO2 production (worsening respiratory failure), and immune suppression. ESPEN guidelines recommend 25–30 kcal/kg/day using an appropriate body weight estimate.

Q

Which drugs are dosed on PBW?

A

Drugs that distribute primarily in lean (non-fat) tissue are dosed on PBW: aminoglycosides (gentamicin, tobramycin), vancomycin (loading dose, though maintenance is based on AUC monitoring), digoxin, neuromuscular blocking agents (rocuronium, vecuronium), and many chemotherapy agents. Drugs that distribute significantly into adipose tissue (e.g., benzodiazepines, lipophilic drugs) may require actual or adjusted body weight.

Q

What is adjusted body weight (AdjBW) and when is it used?

A

Adjusted body weight accounts for partial drug or nutrient distribution into adipose tissue in obese patients: AdjBW = PBW + correction factor × (actual weight − PBW). The correction factor is drug-specific: 0.4 for aminoglycosides and many drugs (40% of excess adipose tissue participates in distribution). AdjBW is used when neither PBW (too low) nor actual weight (too high) is appropriate — most commonly for drug dosing in obesity.

Q

Does the formula change for different ethnic groups?

A

The original Devine formula was derived from primarily Caucasian populations. Some evidence suggests that individuals of Asian descent may have lower lean body mass for the same height, and alternative formulas or adjustments are sometimes used. In pharmacokinetic studies, Asian populations have been observed to reach therapeutic drug concentrations at lower doses per kg PBW for some agents. Clinical pharmacist consultation is recommended for complex cases.

Erreurs courantes à éviter

  • !Setting mechanical ventilation tidal volume using actual weight instead of PBW in obese patients — this is a major cause of ventilator-induced lung injury.
  • !Forgetting to subtract 60 (inches) or 152.4 (cm) from height before multiplying by the per-unit coefficient in the Devine formula.
  • !Using PBW when actual weight is lower — in underweight patients, actual weight is the correct reference for ventilator settings.
  • !Not converting height to inches before using the 2.3-coefficient version of the formula (if using the cm version, use 0.91).
  • !Using PBW for drugs that significantly distribute into fat (lipophilic drugs, benzodiazepines) — these require adjusted or actual body weight.
  • !Applying adult Devine formula to children — paediatric patients require age-appropriate weight estimation methods.
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Conseil Pro

Memorise the quick reference: for a 170 cm male, PBW ≈ 66 kg; for a 165 cm female, PBW ≈ 57 kg. Use these as anchor points for quick bedside calculations during emergencies. Always double-check ventilator tidal volume settings against PBW in any mechanically ventilated patient — this takes 30 seconds and prevents a potentially fatal error.

Le saviez-vous?

The Devine formula was originally published in 1974 by Dr Benjamin J. Devine in a paper titled 'Gentamicin therapy' — not as a general weight formula, but as a practical tool for dosing this nephrotoxic antibiotic appropriately in patients of different sizes. The fact that this empirically derived antibiotic-dosing formula became the global standard for mechanical ventilation tidal volume calculation decades later was entirely unintended by its author.

Regional Guides

🇺🇸 US
Uses US customary units and standards where applicable
🇬🇧 UK
May require conversion to metric units or British standards
🇪🇺 EU
Follows EU conventions and SI units where applicable
📖Difficulté:Intermédiaire
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Reviewed June 2026
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