Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months

Abstract Background There is presently no simple tool for use in large epidemiological studies to understand the food and nutrient intakes of Asian toddlers. This study aimed to assess the relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (sqFFQ) developed for multi-ethnic Singap...

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Main Authors: Cameron Allan, Ummi Hani Abdul Kader, Jowynn Yu Ying Ang, Leilani Muhardi, Smita Nambiar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:BMC Nutrition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40795-018-0252-9
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spelling doaj-4da9a3e23c9e4d94aa9eefde3453f1b92020-11-25T02:15:09ZengBMCBMC Nutrition2055-09282018-12-014111310.1186/s40795-018-0252-9Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 monthsCameron Allan0Ummi Hani Abdul Kader1Jowynn Yu Ying Ang2Leilani Muhardi3Smita Nambiar4School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences, Queensland University of TechnologyEarly Life Nutrition, Danone Nutricia ResearchSchool of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences, Queensland University of TechnologyEarly Life Nutrition, Danone Nutricia ResearchEarly Life Nutrition, Danone Nutricia ResearchAbstract Background There is presently no simple tool for use in large epidemiological studies to understand the food and nutrient intakes of Asian toddlers. This study aimed to assess the relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (sqFFQ) developed for multi-ethnic Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months. Methods Ninety-one parents completed the sqFFQ and a 2-day weighed food record as the reference method. Intake of energy and 25 nutrients were determined for each method and compared using Pearson correlations corrected for attenuation, Bland-Altman plots, and weighted kappa according to quartiles; sqFFQ calibration was performed using multivariable linear regression. Results Deattenuated correlations for energy and all nutrients were acceptable (r = ≥0.30, p < 0.001). The sqFFQ was highly reproducible, but significantly overestimated intake of energy and all nutrients except vitamin A. Bland-Altman plots showed wide limits of agreement for energy and all nutrients. Weighted kappa ranged from 0.12 (slight) to 0.53 (moderate). After calibration, deattenuated correlations improved for energy and 10/25 nutrients, with no change or a slight decline for the remainder, including one falling to r = 0.27. Limits of agreement narrowed for energy and all nutrients, and except for DHA, median intakes were not significantly different except for vitamin A, enabling population estimates of absolute intakes. Weighted kappa improved overall; energy and 16 nutrients now had moderate agreement (0.41–0.60), while 9 nutrients had fair agreement (0.21–0.40). Conclusions The Singaporean toddler semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire is suitable for ranking nutrient intakes of Singaporean toddlers in larger epidemiological studies. However, for population estimates of absolute nutrient intakes, it is recommended that a subsample within a cohort complete weighed food records for calibration purposes. Trial registration This study was registered retrospectively on clinicaltrials.gov on 3rd May 2017 (identifier code: NCT03138330).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40795-018-0252-9Food frequency questionnaireToddlerValidationSingaporeNutrient intake
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cameron Allan
Ummi Hani Abdul Kader
Jowynn Yu Ying Ang
Leilani Muhardi
Smita Nambiar
spellingShingle Cameron Allan
Ummi Hani Abdul Kader
Jowynn Yu Ying Ang
Leilani Muhardi
Smita Nambiar
Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
BMC Nutrition
Food frequency questionnaire
Toddler
Validation
Singapore
Nutrient intake
author_facet Cameron Allan
Ummi Hani Abdul Kader
Jowynn Yu Ying Ang
Leilani Muhardi
Smita Nambiar
author_sort Cameron Allan
title Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
title_short Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
title_full Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
title_fullStr Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
title_full_unstemmed Relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
title_sort relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire for singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months
publisher BMC
series BMC Nutrition
issn 2055-0928
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background There is presently no simple tool for use in large epidemiological studies to understand the food and nutrient intakes of Asian toddlers. This study aimed to assess the relative validity of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (sqFFQ) developed for multi-ethnic Singaporean toddlers aged 15–36 months. Methods Ninety-one parents completed the sqFFQ and a 2-day weighed food record as the reference method. Intake of energy and 25 nutrients were determined for each method and compared using Pearson correlations corrected for attenuation, Bland-Altman plots, and weighted kappa according to quartiles; sqFFQ calibration was performed using multivariable linear regression. Results Deattenuated correlations for energy and all nutrients were acceptable (r = ≥0.30, p < 0.001). The sqFFQ was highly reproducible, but significantly overestimated intake of energy and all nutrients except vitamin A. Bland-Altman plots showed wide limits of agreement for energy and all nutrients. Weighted kappa ranged from 0.12 (slight) to 0.53 (moderate). After calibration, deattenuated correlations improved for energy and 10/25 nutrients, with no change or a slight decline for the remainder, including one falling to r = 0.27. Limits of agreement narrowed for energy and all nutrients, and except for DHA, median intakes were not significantly different except for vitamin A, enabling population estimates of absolute intakes. Weighted kappa improved overall; energy and 16 nutrients now had moderate agreement (0.41–0.60), while 9 nutrients had fair agreement (0.21–0.40). Conclusions The Singaporean toddler semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire is suitable for ranking nutrient intakes of Singaporean toddlers in larger epidemiological studies. However, for population estimates of absolute nutrient intakes, it is recommended that a subsample within a cohort complete weighed food records for calibration purposes. Trial registration This study was registered retrospectively on clinicaltrials.gov on 3rd May 2017 (identifier code: NCT03138330).
topic Food frequency questionnaire
Toddler
Validation
Singapore
Nutrient intake
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40795-018-0252-9
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