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Structure of Dietary Measurement Error: Results of the OPEN Biomarker Study

Multiple-day food records or 24-hour dietary recalls (24HRs) are commonly used as “reference” instruments to calibrate food frequency questionnaires (FFQs) and to adjust findings from nutritional epidemiologic studies for measurement error. Correct adjustment requires that the errors in the adopted...

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Published in:American journal of epidemiology 2003-07, Vol.158 (1), p.14-21
Main Authors: Kipnis, Victor, Subar, Amy F., Midthune, Douglas, Freedman, Laurence S., Ballard-Barbash, Rachel, Troiano, Richard P., Bingham, Sheila, Schoeller, Dale A., Schatzkin, Arthur, Carroll, Raymond J.
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container_issue 1
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container_title American journal of epidemiology
container_volume 158
creator Kipnis, Victor
Subar, Amy F.
Midthune, Douglas
Freedman, Laurence S.
Ballard-Barbash, Rachel
Troiano, Richard P.
Bingham, Sheila
Schoeller, Dale A.
Schatzkin, Arthur
Carroll, Raymond J.
description Multiple-day food records or 24-hour dietary recalls (24HRs) are commonly used as “reference” instruments to calibrate food frequency questionnaires (FFQs) and to adjust findings from nutritional epidemiologic studies for measurement error. Correct adjustment requires that the errors in the adopted reference instrument be independent of those in the FFQ and of true intake. The authors report data from the Observing Protein and Energy Nutrition (OPEN) Study, conducted from September 1999 to March 2000, in which valid reference biomarkers for energy (doubly labeled water) and protein (urinary nitrogen), together with a FFQ and 24HR, were observed in 484 healthy volunteers from Montgomery County, Maryland. Accounting for the reference biomarkers, the data suggest that the FFQ leads to severe attenuation in estimated disease relative risks for absolute protein or energy intake (a true relative risk of 2 would appear as 1.1 or smaller). For protein adjusted for energy intake by using either nutrient density or nutrient residuals, the attenuation is less severe (a relative risk of 2 would appear as approximately 1.3), lending weight to the use of energy adjustment. Using the 24HR as a reference instrument can seriously underestimate true attenuation (up to 60% for energy-adjusted protein). Results suggest that the interpretation of findings from FFQ-based epidemiologic studies of diet-disease associations needs to be reevaluated.
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subjects 24-hour dietary recall
24HR
Adult
Aged
Bias
bias (epidemiology)
Biological and medical sciences
biological markers
Biomarkers - urine
Deuterium Oxide - urine
Diet
Diet Surveys
Dietary Proteins - administration & dosage
DLW
doubly labeled water
Energy Intake
Epidemiologic Methods
Female
FFQ
food frequency questionnaire
Human physiology applied to population studies and life conditions. Human ecophysiology
Humans
Male
Maryland - epidemiology
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Models, Statistical
nutrition assessment
Nutritional survey. Food supply and nutritional requirement
Observing Protein and Energy Nutrition
OPEN
questionnaires
Reference Standards
reference values
Reproducibility of Results
Surveys and Questionnaires - standards
Urea - urine
title Structure of Dietary Measurement Error: Results of the OPEN Biomarker Study
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