The Body Surface Area Calculator computes total surface area in square meters from height and weight. BSA is critical for chemotherapy dosing, cardiac index, and burn fluid resuscitation — scaling drug dosing more accurately than weight alone. Educational use — dosing requires clinical supervision.
1.818
m²
1.81
m²
1.826
m²
1.818
m²
0.016
m²
0.026
m²/kg
1.818
m²
1.81
m²
1.826
m²
1.818
m²
0.016
m²
0.026
m²/kg
Why does oncology use BSA for chemotherapy dosing? Because many cytotoxic drugs are cleared from the body through processes that scale with surface area better than with weight — a 180 cm person with the same weight as a 160 cm person will clear a drug differently, and dosing by weight alone would lead to under- or overdosing. The BSA calculator computes your surface area from height and weight using multiple validated formulas. All medication dosing decisions require physician or pharmacist evaluation.
Multiple formulas exist; each was validated in a different population:
DuBois & DuBois (1916): BSA = 0.007184 × height (cm)^0.725 × weight (kg)^0.425
Mosteller (1987): BSA = √[height (cm) × weight (kg) / 3600]
Haycock (1978): BSA = 0.024265 × height (cm)^0.3964 × weight (kg)^0.5378
Gehan & George (1970): BSA = 0.0235 × height (cm)^0.42246 × weight (kg)^0.51456
Average adult BSA: 1.7–1.9 m². The Mosteller formula is most widely used in clinical practice due to its simplicity; DuBois is the original and most historically referenced. Use this online calculator to compute BSA using all major formulas simultaneously. Always confirm dosing calculations with a qualified prescriber or clinical pharmacist.
The adjusted body weight calculator and clinical calculators provide complementary dosing support tools.
Many physiological parameters — cardiac output, renal filtration, metabolic rate — scale with BSA more closely than with weight. This is because BSA reflects the functional capacity of key metabolic organs better than total mass, which includes variable amounts of fat (metabolically relatively inert for drug clearance). For chemotherapy specifically: drugs cleared by the kidneys and liver are metabolized and excreted in proportion to organ functional capacity, which correlates better with body surface area than with total body weight. However, BSA-based dosing is imperfect — it does not account for organ function, protein binding, drug transporters, or pharmacogenomic variation, which is why therapeutic drug monitoring is critical for narrow-therapeutic-index drugs. All dosing decisions require physician and pharmacist supervision.
A typical adult BSA of 1.7–2.0 m² is considered normal. BSA below 1.5 m² is common in children and small adults. In oncology, chemotherapy doses are expressed in mg/m² and multiplied by the patient's BSA — small differences between formulas can meaningfully affect total drug dose. For cardiac index normalization, cardiac output (L/min) is divided by BSA to yield cardiac index (L/min/m²), with a normal range of 2.5–4.0 L/min/m². BSA also correlates with glomerular filtration rate (GFR) normalization to 1.73 m² (average adult BSA used in eGFR reporting).
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Results
All three formulas yield very similar results (~2.0 m²) for an average adult male, confirming their consistency in normal body habitus.
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Results
For a child weighing 25 kg and 120 cm tall, Haycock gives the highest value. For pediatric chemotherapy, Haycock is the preferred formula.
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