Taylor Allen J, Wong Henry, Wish Karen, Carrow Jon, Bell Debulon, Bindeman Jody, Watkins Tammy, Lehmann Trudy, Bhattarai Saroj, O'Malley Patrick G
Cardiology Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Nutr J. 2003 Jun 13;2:4. doi: 10.1186/1475-2891-2-4.
Dietary assessment tools are often too long, difficult to quantify, expensive to process, and largely used for research purposes. A rapid and accurate assessment of dietary fat intake is critically important in clinical decision-making regarding dietary advice for coronary risk reduction. We assessed the validity of the MEDFICTS (MF) questionnaire, a brief instrument developed to assess fat intake according to the American Heart Association (AHA) dietary "steps".
We surveyed 164 active-duty US Army personnel without known coronary artery disease at their intake interview for a primary prevention cardiac intervention trial using the Block food frequency (FFQ) and MF questionnaires. Both surveys were completed on the same intake visit and independently scored. Correlations between each tools' assessment of fat intake, the agreement in AHA step categorization of dietary quality with each tool, and the test characteristics of the MF using the FFQ as the gold standard were assessed.
Subjects consumed a mean of 36.0 +/- 13.0% of their total calories as fat, which included saturated fat consumption of 13.0 +/- 0.4%. The majority of subjects (125/164; 76.2%) had a high fat (worse than AHA Step 1) diet. There were significant correlations between the MF and the FFQ for the intake of total fat (r = 0.52, P < 0.0001) and saturated fat (r = 0.52, P < 0.0001). Despite these modest correlations, the currently recommended MF cutpoints correctly identified only 29 of 125 (23.3%) high fat (worse than AHA Step 1) diets. Overall agreement for the AHA diet step between the FFQ and MF (using the previously proposed MF score cutoffs of 0-39 [AHA Step 2], 40-70 [Step 1], and > 70 [high fat diet]) was negligible (kappa statistic = 0.036). The MF was accurate at the extremes of fat intake, but could not reliably identify the 3 AHA dietary classifications. Alternative MF cutpoints of < 30 (Step 2), 30-50 (Step 1), and > 50 (high fat diet) were highly sensitive (96%), but had low specificity (46%) for a high fat diet. ROC curve analysis identified that a MF score cutoff of 38 provided optimal sensitivity 75% and specificity 72%, and had modest agreement (kappa = 0.39, P < 0.001) with the FFQ for the identification of subjects with a high fat diet.
The MEDFICTS questionnaire is most suitable as a tool to identify high fat diets, rather than discriminate AHA Step 1 and Step 2 diets. Currently recommended MEDFICTS cutpoints are too high, leading to overestimation of dietary quality. A cutpoint of 38 appears to be providing optimal identification of patients who do not meet AHA dietary guidelines for fat intake.
膳食评估工具往往过长、难以量化、处理成本高,且主要用于研究目的。在关于降低冠心病风险的饮食建议的临床决策中,快速准确地评估膳食脂肪摄入量至关重要。我们评估了MEDFICTS(MF)问卷的有效性,这是一种根据美国心脏协会(AHA)饮食“步骤”开发的简短工具,用于评估脂肪摄入量。
我们在一项初级预防心脏干预试验的入组访谈中,使用Block食物频率问卷(FFQ)和MF问卷对164名无已知冠状动脉疾病的现役美国陆军人员进行了调查。两项调查均在同一次入组就诊时完成,并独立评分。评估了每种工具对脂肪摄入量评估之间的相关性、每种工具在AHA饮食质量步骤分类中的一致性,以及以FFQ为金标准的MF的测试特征。
受试者摄入的脂肪占总热量的平均比例为36.0±13.0%,其中饱和脂肪摄入量为13.0±0.4%。大多数受试者(125/164;76.2%)的饮食脂肪含量高(比AHA第1步更差)。MF与FFQ在总脂肪摄入量(r = 0.52,P < 0.0001)和饱和脂肪摄入量(r = 0.52,P < 0.0001)方面存在显著相关性。尽管有这些适度的相关性,但目前推荐的MF切点仅正确识别出125名高脂肪(比AHA第1步更差)饮食者中的29名(23.3%)。FFQ和MF之间在AHA饮食步骤上的总体一致性(使用先前提出的MF评分切点0 - 39[AHA第2步]、40 - 70[第1步]和> 70[高脂肪饮食])可忽略不计(kappa统计量 = 0.036)。MF在脂肪摄入量的极端情况下是准确的,但不能可靠地识别3种AHA饮食分类。替代的MF切点< 30(第2步)、30 - 50(第1步)和> 50(高脂肪饮食)对高脂肪饮食具有高度敏感性(96%),但特异性较低(46%)。ROC曲线分析确定,MF评分切点为38时提供了最佳敏感性75%和特异性72%,并且在识别高脂肪饮食受试者方面与FFQ有适度的一致性(kappa = 0.39,P < 0.001)。
MEDFICTS问卷最适合作为识别高脂肪饮食的工具,而不是区分AHA第1步和第2步饮食。目前推荐的MEDFICTS切点过高,导致对饮食质量的高估。切点为38似乎能最佳地识别未达到AHA脂肪摄入饮食指南的患者。