Journal article icon

Journal article

Validation of the Oxford WebQ online 24-hour dietary questionnaire using biomarkers

Abstract:
The Oxford WebQ is an online 24-hour dietary questionnaire that is appropriate for repeated administration in large-scale prospective studies, including the UK Biobank study and the Million Women Study. We compared the performance of the Oxford WebQ and a traditional interviewer-administered multiple-pass 24-hour dietary recall against biomarkers for protein, potassium, and total sugar intake and total energy expenditure estimated by accelerometry. We recruited 160 participants in London, United Kingdom, between 2014 and 2016 and measured their biomarker levels at 3 nonconsecutive time points. The measurement error model simultaneously compared all 3 methods. Attenuation factors for protein, potassium, total sugar, and total energy intakes estimated as the mean of 2 applications of the Oxford WebQ were 0.37, 0.42, 0.45, and 0.31, respectively, with performance improving incrementally for the mean of more measures. Correlation between the mean value from 2 Oxford WebQs and estimated true intakes, reflecting attenuation when intake is categorized or ranked, was 0.47, 0.39, 0.40, and 0.38, respectively, also improving with repeated administration. These correlations were similar to those of the more administratively burdensome interviewer-based recall. Using objective biomarkers as the standard, the Oxford WebQ performs well across key nutrients in comparison with more administratively burdensome interviewer-based 24-hour recalls. Attenuation improves when the average value is taken over repeated administrations, reducing measurement error bias in assessment of diet-disease associations.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1093/aje/kwz165

Authors



Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Journal:
American Journal of Epidemiology More from this journal
Volume:
188
Issue:
10
Pages:
1858–1867
Publication date:
2019-07-18
Acceptance date:
2019-06-07
DOI:
EISSN:
1476-6256
ISSN:
0002-9262


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1028615
UUID:
uuid:a7f138a9-147a-47e7-b0d2-30cba60ce2fe
Local pid:
pubs:1028615
Source identifiers:
1028615
Deposit date:
2019-07-08

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP