BACKGROUND: A food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ) used to assess usual food intake in Southern France has been validated by the classical means of multiple-day food records. To minimise over-estimation of the correlation between the dietary assessments by the FFQ and the reference method, which occurs if the random errors of questionnaire and reference measurement are positively correlated, a triangular comparison, the method of triads, was used. METHODS: We applied the triads model by comparing the FFQ with two multiple-day food records and three biomarkers. Only 87 subjects were included and completed the protocol. One biomarker (beta-carotene) was used for the 87 subjects and two biomarkers (urinary nitrogen and potassium) were measured in only 40 subjects. RESULTS: For beta-carotene intake assessment, the triad model, including the weighed multiple records (PETRA), was the best with estimates of validity coefficient of 0.39 [confidence interval (CI) 0.18-0.60] for the FFQ, 0.52 (CI 0.24-0.86), for PETRA and 0.85 (CI 0.43-1) for plasma levels of the nutrient. For protein and potassium intake assessment, the triad model including the estimated multiple records was the best only for the estimates of FFQ validity coefficient (0.61; CI 0.28-0.96 and 0.31; CI 0.09-0.66 respectively). CONCLUSION: Accuracy of the dietary assessment methods permitted a satisfactory estimation of the validity coefficient for beta-carotene intake by the FFQ, despite a small sample. However, the validity coefficients for protein and potassium showed wide CI values, indicating that a sample size < 50 subjects appears unsatisfactory for validation.
BACKGROUND: A food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ) used to assess usual food intake in Southern France has been validated by the classical means of multiple-day food records. To minimise over-estimation of the correlation between the dietary assessments by the FFQ and the reference method, which occurs if the random errors of questionnaire and reference measurement are positively correlated, a triangular comparison, the method of triads, was used. METHODS: We applied the triads model by comparing the FFQ with two multiple-day food records and three biomarkers. Only 87 subjects were included and completed the protocol. One biomarker (beta-carotene) was used for the 87 subjects and two biomarkers (urinary nitrogen and potassium) were measured in only 40 subjects. RESULTS: For beta-carotene intake assessment, the triad model, including the weighed multiple records (PETRA), was the best with estimates of validity coefficient of 0.39 [confidence interval (CI) 0.18-0.60] for the FFQ, 0.52 (CI 0.24-0.86), for PETRA and 0.85 (CI 0.43-1) for plasma levels of the nutrient. For protein and potassium intake assessment, the triad model including the estimated multiple records was the best only for the estimates of FFQ validity coefficient (0.61; CI 0.28-0.96 and 0.31; CI 0.09-0.66 respectively). CONCLUSION: Accuracy of the dietary assessment methods permitted a satisfactory estimation of the validity coefficient for beta-carotene intake by the FFQ, despite a small sample. However, the validity coefficients for protein and potassium showed wide CI values, indicating that a sample size < 50 subjects appears unsatisfactory for validation.
Authors: Loki Natarajan; Minya Pu; Juanjuan Fan; Richard A Levine; Ruth E Patterson; Cynthia A Thomson; Cheryl L Rock; John P Pierce Journal: Am J Epidemiol Date: 2010-08-18 Impact factor: 4.897
Authors: Nasira M Burkholder-Cooley; Sujatha S Rajaram; Ella H Haddad; Keiji Oda; Gary E Fraser; Karen Jaceldo-Siegl Journal: Am J Clin Nutr Date: 2017-01-25 Impact factor: 7.045
Authors: Laila Al-Shaar; Changzheng Yuan; Bernard Rosner; Stefanie B Dean; Kerry L Ivey; Catherine M Clowry; Laura A Sampson; Junaidah B Barnett; Jennifer Rood; Lisa J Harnack; Jason Block; JoAnn E Manson; Meir J Stampfer; Walter C Willett; Eric B Rimm Journal: Am J Epidemiol Date: 2021-06-01 Impact factor: 4.897
Authors: Caroline Méjean; Pierre Traissac; Sabrina Eymard-Duvernay; Jalila El Ati; Francis Delpeuch; Bernard Maire Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2007-09-25 Impact factor: 3.295