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Linear Regression Calibration: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Results in EPIC, Germany
- Source :
- Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism. 46:2-8
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- S. Karger AG, 2002.
-
Abstract
- Large scale dietary assessment instruments are usually based on the food frequency technique and have therefore to be tailored to the involved populations with respect to mode of application and inquired food items. In multicenter studies with different populations, the direct comparability of dietary data is therefore a challenge because each local dietary assessment tool might have its specific measurement error. Thus, for risk analysis the direct use of dietary measurements across centers requires a common reference. For example, in the European prospective cohort study EPIC (European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition) a 24-hour recall was chosen to serve as such a reference instrument which was based on a highly standardized computer-assisted interview (EPIC-SOFT). The 24-hour recall was applied to a representative subset of EPIC participants in all centers. The theoretical framework of combining multicenter dietary information was previously published in several papers and is called linear regression calibration. It is based on a linear regression of the food frequency questionnaire to the reference. The regression coefficients describe the absolute and proportional scaling bias of the questionnaire with the 24-hour recall taken as reference. This article describes the statistical basis of the calibration approach and presents first empirical results of its application to fruit, cereals and meat consumption in EPIC Germany represented by the two EPIC centers, Heidelberg and Potsdam. It was found that fruit could be measured well by the questionnaire in both centers (λcirc; = 0.98 (males) and λcirc; = 0.95 (females) in Heidelberg, and λcirc; = 0.86 (males) and λcirc; = 0.7 (females) in Potsdam), cereals less (λcirc; = 0.53 (males) and λcirc; = 0.4 (females) in Heidelberg, and λcirc; = 0.53 (males) and λcirc; = 0.44 (females) in Potsdam), and that the assessment of meat (λcirc; = 0.72 (males) and λcirc; = 0.65 (females) in Heidelberg, and λcirc; = 0.49 (males) and λcirc; = 0.42 (females) in Potsdam) has a center-specific bias. The application of the calibration approach to the questionnaire data will change the ranking of the two centers following the data of the reference instrument, and not well-measured food items will exhibit considerably less variation compared to the original data. We conclude that calibration is a necessary step in multicenter studies. However, this exercise shows that the current statistical framework is not yet sufficiently developed for a broad application.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Meat
Dietary assessment
Scale (ratio)
Calibration (statistics)
Computer science
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cohort Studies
Risk analysis (business)
Germany
Surveys and Questionnaires
Linear regression
Econometrics
Animals
Humans
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Prospective Studies
Nutrition and Dietetics
Observational error
Mode (statistics)
Linear model
Middle Aged
Diet Records
Nutrition Assessment
Fruit
Calibration
Mental Recall
Linear Models
Female
Edible Grain
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14219697 and 02506807
- Volume :
- 46
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7295a4375a0316f4ca8ef3c68f0f8f44
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000046746