Low energy reporting may increase in intervention participants enrolled in dietary intervention trials Journal Article


Authors: Caan, B.; Ballard-Barbash, R.; Slattery, M. L.; Pinsky, J. L.; Iber, F. L.; Mateski, D. J.; Marshall, J. R.; Paskett, E. D.; Shike, M.; Weissfeld, J. L.; Schatzkin, A.; Lanza, E.
Article Title: Low energy reporting may increase in intervention participants enrolled in dietary intervention trials
Abstract: Objective To examine differences in low energy intake reporting between intervention and control groups during a dietary intervention trial. Design Retrospective data analysis from a subcohort of participants in the Polyp Prevention Trial (PPT), a 4-year, multisite, randomized, controlled dietary intervention trial. Intervention consisted of educational material and counseling sessions supporting a low-fat, high-fiber diet. Baseline and annual demographics, behavioral characteristics, energy intake (EI) based on self-reported 4-day food records, and height and weight of participants were collected at baseline and annually. Basal metabolic rate (BMR) was estimated (using the Schofield equation) to calculate EI/BMR. Subjects Of the 443 participants (302 male, 141 female) at baseline, 195 (43.3%) were younger than 60 years, and 394 (91%) were white. At Year 4, 383 participants remained: 186 (122 men, 64 women) in the intervention group, and 197 (133 men, 64 women) in the control group. Statistical analyses Using either paired t tests or analysis of variance, the differences between the means for EI, weight, and EI/BMR were compared at baseline, Year 1, and Year 4 for the participants who remained at Year 4. The Goldberg EI/BMR cutoff value of 1.06 (for plausible EI) identified participants who reported low EI. Linear regression was used to quantify the association of various risk factors to EI/BMR and for multivariate analyses within groups. χ2 contingency table analysis quantified differences of low energy reporting within groups. Results At baseline, 46.8% of women and 11.6% of men reported lower than plausible EI. Only men had a significant increase in low energy reporting after randomization. At Year 1, 18.9% of intervention group men reported low EI compared with 9.8% of control group men (P<.05). At Year 4, 23.0% of intervention group men reported low EI compared with 12.8% of control group men (P<.05). Conclusions/ applications Difference in low EI reporting between intervention and control groups could distort results from dietary intervention trials; interpretation of findings from dietary trials must include this potential bias. Intervention study design should include dietary intake data collection methods that are not subject to such bias (ie, biomarkers and performance criteria) to measure intervention compliance.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; middle aged; retrospective studies; research design; caloric intake; counseling; energy intake; reproducibility of results; cohort studies; body weight; obesity; self report; diet; randomized controlled trials; body height; dietary intake; bias (epidemiology); european american; normal human; health education; human experiment; low fat diet; high fiber diet; intervention studies; diet records; humans; human; male; female; article; basal metabolic rate; basal metabolism
Journal Title: Journal of the American Dietetic Association
Volume: 104
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0002-8223
Publisher: Amer Dietetic Assoc  
Date Published: 2004-03-01
Start Page: 357
End Page: 366
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.jada.2003.12.023
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 14993857
DOI/URL:
Notes: J. Am. Diet. Assoc. -- Cited By (since 1996):17 -- Export Date: 16 June 2014 -- CODEN: JADAA -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Moshe Shike
    168 Shike