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Measuring energy, macro and micronutrient intake in UK children and adolescents: a comparison of validated dietary assessment tools

Measuring energy, macro and micronutrient intake in UK children and adolescents: a comparison of validated dietary assessment tools
Measuring energy, macro and micronutrient intake in UK children and adolescents: a comparison of validated dietary assessment tools
Background: measuring dietary intake in children and adolescents can be challenging due to misreporting, difficulties in establishing portion size and reliance on recording dietary data via proxy reporters. The aim of this review was to present results from a recent systematic review of reviews reporting and comparing validated dietary assessment tools used in younger populations in the UK.

Methods: validation data for dietary assessment tools used in younger populations (≤18 years) were extracted and summarised using results from a systematic review of reviews of validated dietary assessment tools. Mean differences and Bland-Altman limits of agreement (LOA) between the test and reference tool were extracted or calculated and compared for energy, macronutrients and micronutrients.

Results: 17 studies which reported validation of 14 dietary assessment tool (DATs) were identified with relevant nutrition information. The most commonly validated nutrients were energy, carbohydrate, protein, fat, calcium, iron, folate and vitamin C. There were no validated DATs reporting assessment of zinc, iodine or selenium intake. The most frequently used reference method was the weighed food diary, followed by doubly labelled water and 24h recall. Summary plots were created to facilitate comparison between tools. On average, the test tools reported higher mean intakes than the reference methods with some studies consistently reporting wide LOA. Out of the 14 DATs, absolute values for LOA and mean difference were obtained for 11 DATs for EI. From the 24 validation results assessing EI, 16 (67%) reported higher mean intakes than the reference. Of the seven (29%) validation studies using doubly labelled water (DLW) as the reference, results for the test DATs were not substantially better or worse than those using other reference measures. Further information on the studies from this review is available on the www.nutritools.org website.

Conclusions: validated dietary assessment tools for use with children and adolescents in the UK have been identified and compared. Whilst tools are generally validated for macronutrient intakes, micronutrients are poorly evaluated. Validation studies that include estimates of zinc, selenium, dietary fibre, sugars and sodium are needed.
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Bush, Linda A.
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Hutchinson, Jayne
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Hooson, Jozef
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Hancock, Neil
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Warthon-Medina, Marisol
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Greathead, Katharine
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Knowles, Bethany
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Vargas-Garcia, Elisa
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Gibson, Lauren
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Margetts, Barrie
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Robinson, Sian
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Ness, Andy
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Alwan, Nisreen
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Wark, Petra
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Roe, Mark
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Finglas, Paul
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Steer, Toni
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Page, Polly
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Johnson, Laura
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Roberts, Katherine
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Amoutzopoulos, Birdem
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Greenwood, Darren
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Cade, Janet
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Bush, Linda A.
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Hutchinson, Jayne
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Hooson, Jozef
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Hancock, Neil
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Warthon-Medina, Marisol
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Greathead, Katharine
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Knowles, Bethany
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Vargas-Garcia, Elisa
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Gibson, Lauren
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Margetts, Barrie
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Ness, Andy
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Wark, Petra
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Roe, Mark
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Finglas, Paul
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Steer, Toni
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Page, Polly
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Johnson, Laura
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Roberts, Katherine
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Amoutzopoulos, Birdem
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Greenwood, Darren
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Cade, Janet
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Bush, Linda A., Hutchinson, Jayne, Hooson, Jozef, Hancock, Neil, Warthon-Medina, Marisol, Greathead, Katharine, Knowles, Bethany, Vargas-Garcia, Elisa, Gibson, Lauren, Margetts, Barrie, Robinson, Sian, Ness, Andy, Alwan, Nisreen, Wark, Petra, Roe, Mark, Finglas, Paul, Steer, Toni, Page, Polly, Johnson, Laura, Roberts, Katherine, Amoutzopoulos, Birdem, Greenwood, Darren and Cade, Janet (2019) Measuring energy, macro and micronutrient intake in UK children and adolescents: a comparison of validated dietary assessment tools. BMC Nutrition, 5, 1-17, [53]. (doi:10.1186/s40795-019-0312-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: measuring dietary intake in children and adolescents can be challenging due to misreporting, difficulties in establishing portion size and reliance on recording dietary data via proxy reporters. The aim of this review was to present results from a recent systematic review of reviews reporting and comparing validated dietary assessment tools used in younger populations in the UK.

Methods: validation data for dietary assessment tools used in younger populations (≤18 years) were extracted and summarised using results from a systematic review of reviews of validated dietary assessment tools. Mean differences and Bland-Altman limits of agreement (LOA) between the test and reference tool were extracted or calculated and compared for energy, macronutrients and micronutrients.

Results: 17 studies which reported validation of 14 dietary assessment tool (DATs) were identified with relevant nutrition information. The most commonly validated nutrients were energy, carbohydrate, protein, fat, calcium, iron, folate and vitamin C. There were no validated DATs reporting assessment of zinc, iodine or selenium intake. The most frequently used reference method was the weighed food diary, followed by doubly labelled water and 24h recall. Summary plots were created to facilitate comparison between tools. On average, the test tools reported higher mean intakes than the reference methods with some studies consistently reporting wide LOA. Out of the 14 DATs, absolute values for LOA and mean difference were obtained for 11 DATs for EI. From the 24 validation results assessing EI, 16 (67%) reported higher mean intakes than the reference. Of the seven (29%) validation studies using doubly labelled water (DLW) as the reference, results for the test DATs were not substantially better or worse than those using other reference measures. Further information on the studies from this review is available on the www.nutritools.org website.

Conclusions: validated dietary assessment tools for use with children and adolescents in the UK have been identified and compared. Whilst tools are generally validated for macronutrient intakes, micronutrients are poorly evaluated. Validation studies that include estimates of zinc, selenium, dietary fibre, sugars and sodium are needed.

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NUTN_D_19_00069_R2_final - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 September 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 November 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 434816
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434816
PURE UUID: 123a38fc-556e-4e6d-8ce8-d70433cfead4
ORCID for Nisreen Alwan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-8463

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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:38

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Contributors

Author: Linda A. Bush
Author: Jayne Hutchinson
Author: Jozef Hooson
Author: Neil Hancock
Author: Marisol Warthon-Medina
Author: Katharine Greathead
Author: Bethany Knowles
Author: Elisa Vargas-Garcia
Author: Lauren Gibson
Author: Barrie Margetts
Author: Sian Robinson
Author: Andy Ness
Author: Nisreen Alwan ORCID iD
Author: Petra Wark
Author: Mark Roe
Author: Paul Finglas
Author: Toni Steer
Author: Polly Page
Author: Laura Johnson
Author: Katherine Roberts
Author: Birdem Amoutzopoulos
Author: Darren Greenwood
Author: Janet Cade

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