BIPS - Institute for Epidemiology and Prevention Research, Achterstraße 30, 28359 Bremen, Germany.
Br J Nutr. 2013 Apr 14;109(7):1257-65. doi: 10.1017/S0007114512003194. Epub 2012 Aug 6.
Dietary assessment is strongly affected by misreporting (both under- and over-reporting), which results in measurement error. Knowledge about misreporting is essential to correctly interpret potentially biased associations between diet and health outcomes. In young children, dietary data mainly rely on proxy respondents but little is known about determinants of misreporting here. The present analysis was conducted within the framework of the multi-centre IDEFICS (Identification and prevention of dietary- and lifestyle-induced health effects in children and infants) study and is based on 6101 children aged 2-9 years with 24 h dietary recall (24-HDR) and complete covariate information. Adapted Goldberg cut-offs were applied to classify the 24-HDR as 'over-report', 'plausible report' or 'under-report'. Backward elimination in the course of multi-level logistic regression analyses was conducted to identify factors significantly related to under- and over-reporting. Next to characteristics of the children and parents, social factors and parental concerns/perceptions concerning their child's weight status were considered. Further selective misreporting was addressed, investigating food group intakes commonly perceived as more or less socially desirable. Proportions of under-, plausible and over-reports were 8.0, 88.6 and 3.4 %, respectively. The risk of under-reporting increased with age (OR 1.19, 95 % CI 1.05, 1.83), BMI z-score of the child (OR 1.23, 95 % CI 1.10, 1.37) and household size (OR 1.12, 95 % CI 1.01, 1.25), and was higher in low/medium income groups (OR 1.45, 95 % CI 1.13, 1.86). Over-reporting was negatively associated with BMI z-scores of the child (OR 0.78, 95 % CI 0.69, 0.88) and higher in girls (OR 1.70, 95 % CI 1.27, 2.28). Further social desirability and parental concerns/perceptions seemed to influence the reporting behaviour. Future studies should involve these determinants of misreporting when investigating diet-disease relationships in children to correct for the differential reporting bias.
膳食评估受到错误报告(包括少报和多报)的强烈影响,这会导致测量误差。了解错误报告对于正确解释饮食与健康结果之间潜在的偏倚关联至关重要。在幼儿中,饮食数据主要依赖于代理受访者,但对于这里的错误报告决定因素知之甚少。本分析是在多中心 IDEFICS(儿童和婴儿饮食和生活方式诱导的健康影响的识别和预防)研究框架内进行的,基于 6101 名 2-9 岁儿童的 24 小时膳食回忆(24-HDR)和完整的协变量信息。采用经过适应性修改的 Goldberg 截断值将 24-HDR 分类为“多报”、“合理报告”或“少报”。在多水平逻辑回归分析的过程中进行了向后消除,以确定与少报和多报显著相关的因素。除了儿童和父母的特征外,还考虑了社会因素以及父母对孩子体重状况的关注/看法。进一步探讨了选择性错误报告,调查了通常被认为更具或不具社会期望的食物组摄入量。少报、合理报告和多报的比例分别为 8.0%、88.6%和 3.4%。少报的风险随年龄增长而增加(OR 1.19,95%CI 1.05,1.83),儿童 BMI z 分数(OR 1.23,95%CI 1.10,1.37)和家庭规模(OR 1.12,95%CI 1.01,1.25),低收入/中等收入群体(OR 1.45,95%CI 1.13,1.86)的少报风险更高。多报与儿童 BMI z 分数呈负相关(OR 0.78,95%CI 0.69,0.88),且女孩(OR 1.70,95%CI 1.27,2.28)的多报风险更高。进一步的社会期望和父母的关注/看法似乎影响了报告行为。未来的研究在调查儿童饮食与疾病的关系时,应考虑这些错误报告的决定因素,以纠正差异报告偏差。