The mode of backfilling has a heck of a lot to do with the pressures first developed. My measurements were on walls that could not rotate. For instance, compacting near the wall can build up pressures exceeding an equivalent fluid pressure coefficient (Kh)of the unit density of the backfill and more, like 1.0+. That compaction effect has even been found some 8 feet down from the elevation of the compactor on the surface. My further measurements have shown that keeping the compactors out 24 inches will end up with a cushion effect (some movement within that 24") so as to duplicate what a rotating wall would do, leaving active as the usual Kv, with sand as the backfill material. That "looser" zone is of no consequence when it comes to the surface soil settling. I call that the "silo effect", hanging up on both the wall and the compacted material farther out. So, I'd design for active, but specify no compactors within 24 inches of the wall. A little codification would be to hit the final surface next to the wall if you wish, recognizing the looser zone will not transmit that effect much down the wall.