AS289 - Pooling validation studies with recovery biomarkers

Related Papers

Pooled results from 5 validation studies of dietary self-report instruments using recovery biomarkers for potassium and sodium intake

Laurence Freedman et al., 2015/3 PubMed #25787264 MSID: 2388
We pooled data from 5 large validation studies (1999-2009) of dietary self-report instruments that used recovery biomarkers as referents, to assess food frequency questionnaires (FFQs) and 24-hour recalls (24HRs). Here we report on total potassium and sodium intakes, their densities, and their ratio. Results were similar by sex but were heterogeneous across studies. For potassium, potassium density, sodium, sodium density, and sodium:potassium ratio, average correlation coefficients for the corr...
Related Studies: 218, 272, 289

A statistical model for measurement error that incorporates variation over time in the target measure, with application to nutritional epidemiology

Laurence Freedman et al., 2015/7 PubMed #26173857 MSID: 2605
Most statistical methods that adjust analyses for measurement error assume that the target exposure T is a fixed quantity for each individual. However, in many applications, the value of T for an individual varies with time. We develop a model that accounts for such variation, describing the model within the framework of a meta-analysis of validation studies of dietary self-report instruments, where the reference instruments are biomarkers. We demonstrate that in this application, the estimates ...
Keywords: 24-Hour Recall; Attenuation Factor; Calibration Equations; Food Frequency Questionnaire; Recovery Biomarker
Related Studies: 289

Application of a new statistical model for measurement error to the evaluation of dietary self-report instruments

Laurence Freedman et al., 2015/11 PubMed #26360372 MSID: 2604
Most statistical methods that adjust analyses for dietary measurement error treat an individual's usual intake as a fixed quantity. However, usual intake, if defined as average intake over a few months, varies over time. We describe a model that accounts for such variation and for the proximity of biomarker measurements to self-reports within the framework of a meta-analysis, and apply it to the analysis of data on energy, protein, potassium, and sodium from a set of five large validation studie...
Related Studies: 289

Pooled results from 5 validation studies of dietary self-report instruments using recovery biomarkers for energy and protein intake

Laurence Freedman et al., 2014/7 PubMed #24918187 MSID: 2278
We pooled data from 5 large validation studies of dietary self-report instruments that used recovery biomarkers as references to clarify the measurement properties of food frequency questionnaires (FFQs) and 24-hour recalls. The studies were conducted in widely differing US adult populations from 1999 to 2009. We report on total energy, protein, and protein density intakes. Results were similar across sexes, but there was heterogeneity across studies. Using a FFQ, the average correlation coeffic...
Keywords: 24-Hour Recall; Attenuation Factors; Calibration Equations; Dietary Measurement Error; Food Frequency Questionnaire; Under-Reporting
Related Studies: 218, 272, 289

Combining a food frequency questionnaire with 24-hour recalls to increase the precision of estimating usual dietary intakes – evidence from the Validation Studies Pooling Project

Laurence Freedman et al., 2018/6 PubMed #29917051 MSID: 3497
Improving estimates of individuals' dietary intakes is key to obtaining more reliable evidence for diet-health relationships from nutritional cohort studies. One approach to improvement is combining information from different self-report instruments. Previous work evaluated the gains obtained from combining information from a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and multiple 24-hour recalls (24HRs), based on assuming that 24HRs provide unbiased measures of individual intakes. Here, we evaluate the...
Related Studies: 289

Evaluation of the 24-hour recall as a reference instrument for calibrating other self-report instruments in nutritional cohort studies: evidence from the Validation Studies Pooling Project

Laurence Freedman et al., 2017/7 PubMed #28402488 MSID: 2795
Calibrating dietary self-report instruments is recommended as a way to adjust for measurement error when estimating diet-disease associations. Because biomarkers available for calibration are limited, most investigators use self-reports (e.g., 24-hour recalls (24HRs)) as the reference instrument. We evaluated the performance of 24HRs as reference instruments for calibrating food frequency questionnaires (FFQs), using data from the Validation Studies Pooling Project, comprising 5 large validation...
Keywords: Attenuation Factor; Calibration Equations; Dietary Intake; Food Frequency Questionnaire; Measurement Error; Nutritional Epidemiologic Methods
Related Studies: 289