| Literature DB >> 26855775 |
Anne A Bjerregaard1, Inge Tetens2, Sjurdur F Olsen1, Thorhallur I Halldorsson3.
Abstract
FFQ are widely used in large-scale studies to assess dietary intake. To aid interpretation of diet-disease associations assessment of validity must be performed. Reproducibility is one aspect of validity focusing on the stability of repeated assessment with the same method which may also reveal problems in instrument design or participant instructions. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the reproducibility of a web-based FFQ targeting Danish adolescents within the Danish National Birth Cohort (DNBC). Data for the present study were obtained from a prospective design nested within the DNBC. Adolescents aged 13 to 15 years old (n 48, 60 % girls) completed the FFQ twice 4 weeks apart. The proportion of adolescents consistently classified into the same tertile according to amount of food intake ranged from 45 % (fish) to 77 % (vegetables), whereas classification into opposite tertiles ranged from 0 % (fruit, oils and dressing) to 15 % (beverages). Overall, no significant differences were observed in intake of food groups or nutrients between the two completions of the FFQ. Mean crude Spearman correlation for all food groups was 0·56 and mean intra-class correlation for all food groups was 0·61. In conclusion, the reproducibility of the FFQ for Danish adolescents was acceptable. The study revealed that adolescents aged 13-15 years seemed capable of recalling consistently overall dietary habits and had some difficulties estimating the frequency of consumption of regularly consumed food items.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Dietary assessment; FFQ; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; ICC, intra-class correlation coefficient; Reproducibility; Web-based FFQ
Year: 2016 PMID: 26855775 PMCID: PMC4736093 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2015.39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Participant characteristics (n 47, 60 % girls)
| % | ||
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | ||
| Mean | 13·5 | |
| | 0·6 | |
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||
| Median | 19·7 | |
| 5th–95th percentiles | 17–28 | |
| Overweight ( | 11 | 23·4 |
| Obese | 3 | 6·4 |
| Children born from GDM mothers | 28 | 59·5 |
| Parental educational level | ||
| High level of education | 21·0 | |
| Medium level of education | 36·0 | |
| Skilled workers | 21·0 | |
| Unskilled workers | 21·0 |
GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus.
Overweight: BMI >25 kg/m2.
Obese: BMI >30 kg/m2.
Highest educational level of two parents during pregnancy presented as percentage.
Differences in and intra-class correlations for food groups and energy and macronutrients between FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n 47)
| FFQ1 | FFQ2 | Classified into tertiles (%) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | p25–p75th | Median | p25–p75 | FFQ1/FFQ2 (%) | Spearman correlation: | Intra-class correlation: | Same | Opposite | Cohen's weighted κ | ||
| Food groups | |||||||||||
| Beverages (g/d) | 1019 | 632–1205 | 759 | 538–1166 | 0·11 | 34 | 0·39 | 0·37 | 47 | 15 | 0·30 |
| Dairy products (g/d) | 350 | 208–710 | 343 | 154–561 | 0·18 | 2 | 0·56 | 0·43 | 68 | 6 | 0·57 |
| Bread (g/d) | 189 | 129–286 | 181 | 130–252 | 0·63 | 4 | 0·56 | 0·71 | 53 | 9 | 0·37 |
| Cereals (g/d) | 31 | 14–53 | 32 | 14–52 | 0·93 | −3 | 0·55 | 0·45 | 66 | 4 | 0·57 |
| Meat/poultry (g/d) | 85 | 56–136 | 70 | 54–150 | 0·16 | 21 | 0·54 | 0·51 | 53 | 9 | 0·37 |
| Fish (g/d) | 45 | 7–17 | 10 | 5–15 | 0·34 | 350 | 0·42 | 0·61 | 45 | 13 | 0·23 |
| Fruit (g/d) | 167 | 42–260 | 144 | 50–286 | 0·69 | 16 | 0·83 | 0·83 | 62 | 0 | 0·57 |
| Vegetables (g/d) | 124 | 72–188 | 105 | 57–170 | 0·41 | 18 | 0·71 | 0·68 | 77 | 2 | 0·71 |
| Sugar and sweets (g/d) | 54 | 37–105 | 51 | 33–114 | 0·78 | 6 | 0·71 | 0·62 | 62 | 4 | 0·52 |
| Oils and dressing (g/d) | 33 | 18–48 | 31 | 18–43 | 0·77 | 6 | 0·72 | 0·66 | 66 | 0 | 0·61 |
| Nutrients | |||||||||||
| Energy (MJ/d) | 7·8 | 5·7–10·3 | 7·5 | 5·4–9·9 | 0·49 | 4 | 0·78 | 0·75 | 49 | 4 | 0·37 |
| Protein (g/d) | 73 | 54–99 | 69 | 50–88 | 0·18 | 6 | 0·69 | 0·64 | 49 | 4 | 0·37 |
| Fat (g/d) | 73 | 50–95 | 61 | 48–97 | 0·36 | 20 | 0·68 | 0·66 | 55 | 2 | 0·47 |
| Carbohydrate (g/d) | 217 | 177–346 | 257 | 162–312 | 0·69 | −16 | 0·65 | 0·79 | 53 | 4 | 0·42 |
| Protein (% energy) | 15 | 2·4 | 15 | 2·1 | 0·05 | 0 | 0·35 | 0·33 | 43 | 11 | 0·23 |
| Fat (% energy) | 33 | 5·9 | 32 | 6·3 | 0·89 | 3 | 0·65 | 0·65 | 53 | 4 | 0·42 |
| Carbohydrate (% energy) | 52 | 6·1 | 53 | 6·7 | 0·36 | −2 | 0·52 | 0·51 | 55 | 6 | 0·42 |
p25, 25th Percentile; p75, 75th percentile.
Median and percentiles for all variables except energy percentage from macronutirents: mean and sd.
Median difference for all variables except energy percentage from macronutirents: mean difference.
P < 0·001 for all food groups.
Reliability test P < 0·05 for beverages, dairy products, cereals, energy percentage from protein, P < 0·0001 for all others.
Agreement in questions between FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n 47)
| Selected questions | Complete agreement between FFQ1 and FFQ2 (%) |
|---|---|
| Dietary patterns/lifestyle | |
| From where did you get lunch most often on school days the last month? | 89 |
| Did you consume multivitamins? | 94 |
| Did you do any sport exercise in your spare time? | 98 |
| Type of milk | 83 |
| Type of dairy products | 79 |
| Frequently consumed food items | |
| White bread | 34 |
| Whole-grain bread | 36 |
| Cornflakes | 53 |
| Potatoes | 34 |
| Rarely consumed food items | |
| Fish | 62 |
| Porridge | 68 |
| Sausages | 55 |
| Avocado | 70 |
| Less healthy food items | |
| Sugar-sweetened beverages | 55 |
| Nutella | 40 |
| Jam | 32 |
| Candy | 58 |