Measuring dietary change in a diet intervention trial: Comparing food frequency questionnaire and dietary recalls

Cynthia A. Thomson, Anna Giuliano, Cheryl L. Rock, Cheryl K. Ritenbaugh, Shirley W. Flatt, Susan Faerber, Vicky Newman, Bette Caan, Ellen Graver, Vern Hartz, Robin Whitacre, Felicia Parker, John P. Pierce, James R. Marshall

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

118 Scopus citations

Abstract

Measurement of dietary change was assessed in a systematic quota subsample (n = 397) of women recruited into the Women's Healthy Eating and Living Study between 1996 and 1998, a multicenter, randomized dietary intervention trial among breast cancer survivors. Women from the intervention and comparison arms completed the Arizona Food Frequency Questionnaire (AFFQ) and 24-hour dietary recalls at baseline (prerandomization) and at year 1 (postrandomization). Both dietary measurement methods demonstrated significant changes in intake of key intervention-associated nutrients at year 1 in the intervention group subjects compared with minimal or no change in the comparison group subjects. The reliability of the AFFQ and recalls was measured in the comparison group and showed correlations of 0.63 and 0.43, respectively. Both instruments captured differences in dietary intake associated with the diet intervention. These results demonstrate the utility of using a multimode, multimethod approach (AFFQ and 24-hour dietary recalls) to measure differences in self-reported dietary intake over time as shown in this dietary intervention trial being conducted among breast cancer survivors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)754-762
Number of pages9
JournalAmerican journal of epidemiology
Volume157
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 15 2003

Keywords

  • Breast neoplasms
  • Clinical trials
  • Food habits
  • Questionnaires
  • Recall

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Epidemiology

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