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Volume 107, Issue 5, Pages 752-759 (May 2007)


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Validation of Three Food Frequency Questionnaires to Assess Dietary Calcium Intake in Adults

Nancy G. Sebring, MEd, RD, Blakeley I. Denkinger, RD, Carolyn M. Menzie, Lisa B. Yanoff, MD, Shamik J. Parikh, MD, Jack A. Yanovski, MD, PhDCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Abstract 

Objective

To assess the accuracy of three self-administered food frequency questionnaires (FFQs) to measure dietary calcium intake in healthy adults.

Design

Estimates of dietary calcium intake from one previously validated and two recently developed FFQs were compared with those from 7-day food records.

Subjects/setting

Healthy adults enrolled in an outpatient study of calcium supplementation completed the 36-page Dietary History Questionnaire (DHQ), a 3-page Calcium Questionnaire, and a 1-page Short Calcium Questionnaire. Subjects then completed a 7-day food record.

Main outcome measures

Differences between calcium intake reported on FFQs and calcium intake from food records were compared.

Statistical analyses

Spearman correlations were used to measure associations among variables; Bland-Altman pairwise comparisons were conducted to assess systematic and magnitude biases.

Results

We studied 341 subjects, 74.5% female, mean (±standard deviation) age of 38±11 years and body mass index (calculated as kg/m2) of 31.8±7.1. Mean (±standard deviation) food record calcium intake was 896±380 mg/day; data from all three FFQs were positively related to food record calcium intake, but accounted for <40% of the variance in food record dietary calcium intake (DHQ: r2=0.21; Calcium Questionnaire: r2=0.33; Short Calcium Questionnaire: r2=0.37; all P<0.001). The DHQ underestimated daily calcium intake (systematic bias: −94 mg/day, P<0.001; magnitude bias r=−0.40; P<0.001), whereas the Calcium Questionnaire overestimated calcium intake (systematic bias +177 mg/day, P<0.001), but had no significant magnitude bias (r=−0.09; P=0.11). The Short Calcium Questionnaire showed minimal systematic bias (+34 mg/day, P=0.09), but had magnitude bias (r=−0.33; P<0.001).

Conclusions

All three FFQs performed reasonably well at estimating dietary calcium intake compared to food records; each may be appropriate for use in select clinical and research settings.

Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Jack A. Yanovski, MD, PhD, Unit on Growth and Obesity National Institutes of Health, 10 Center Dr, Hatfield Clinical Research Center, Rm 1-3330, MSC 1103, Bethesda, MD 20892-1103.

PII: S0002-8223(07)00193-9

doi:10.1016/j.jada.2007.02.007


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