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Gains in statistical power from using a dietary biomarker in combination with self-reported intake to strengthen the analysis of a diet-disease association: an example from CAREDS.
- Source :
-
American journal of epidemiology [Am J Epidemiol] 2010 Oct 01; Vol. 172 (7), pp. 836-42. Date of Electronic Publication: 2010 Aug 17. - Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- A major problem in detecting diet-disease associations in nutritional cohort studies is measurement error in self-reported intakes, which causes loss of statistical power. The authors propose using biomarkers correlated with dietary intake to strengthen analyses of diet-disease hypotheses and to increase statistical power. They consider combining self-reported intakes and biomarker levels using principal components or a sum of ranks and relating the combined measure to disease in conventional regression analyses. They illustrate their method in a study of the inverse association of dietary lutein plus zeaxanthin with nuclear cataracts, using serum lutein plus zeaxanthin as the biomarker, with data from the Carotenoids in Age-Related Eye Disease Study (United States, 2001-2004). This example demonstrates that the combined measure provides higher statistical significance than the dietary measure or the serum measure alone, and it potentially provides sample savings of 8%-53% over analysis with dietary intake alone and of 6%-48% over analysis with serum level alone, depending on the definition of the outcome variable and the choice of confounders entered into the regression model. The authors conclude that combining appropriate biomarkers with dietary data in a cohort can strengthen the investigation of diet-disease associations by increasing the statistical power to detect them.
- Subjects :
- Aged
Cataract blood
Cataract epidemiology
Dietary Supplements
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Incidence
Middle Aged
Models, Statistical
Retrospective Studies
Surveys and Questionnaires
United States epidemiology
Biomarkers blood
Carotenoids pharmacokinetics
Cataract diet therapy
Diet Records
Lutein pharmacokinetics
Nutrition Surveys
Nutritional Status physiology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1476-6256
- Volume :
- 172
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- American journal of epidemiology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 20716705
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwq194