BMC Medical Research Methodology (Apr 2025)
Dietary misreporting: a comparative study of recalls vs energy expenditure and energy intake by doubly-labeled water in older adults with overweight or obesity
Abstract
Abstract Background Self-report methods are widely used to assess energy intake but are prone to measurement errors. We aimed to identify under-reported, over-reported, and plausible self-reported energy intake by dietary recalls (rEI) using a standard method (Method 1) that calculates the rEI ratio against measured energy expenditure (mEE) by doubly-labeled water (DLW), and compare it to a novel method (Method 2), which calculates the rEI ratio against measured energy intake (mEI) by the principle of energy balance (EB = mEE + changes in energy stores). Methods The rEI:mEE and rEI:mEI ratios were assessed for each subject. Group cut-offs were calculated for both methods, using the coefficient of variations of rEI, mEE, and mEI. Entries within ± 1SD of the cutoffs were categorized as plausible, 1SD as over-reported. Kappa statistics was calculated to assess the agreement between both methods. Percentage bias (bβ) was estimated by linear regression. Remaining bias (dβ) was calculated after applying each method cutoffs. Results The percentage of under-reporting was 50% using both methods. Using Method 1, 40.3% of recalls were categorized as plausible, and 10.2% as over-reported. With Method 2, 26.3% and 23.7% recalls were plausible and over-reported, respectively. There was a significant positive relationship between mEI with weight (ß = 21.7, p < 0.01) and BMI (ß = 48.8, p = 0.04), but not between rEI with weight (ß = 13.1, p = 0.06) and BMI (ß = 41.8, p = 0.11). The rEI relationships were significant when only plausible entries were included using Method 1 (weight: ß = 17.4, p < 0.01, remaining bias = 49.5%; BMI: ß = 44.6, p = 0.01, remaining bias = 60.2%) and Method 2 (weight: ß = 19.5, p < 0.01, remaining bias = 24.9%; BMI: ß = 44.8, p = 0.03, remaining bias = 56.9%). Conclusions The choice of method significantly impacts plausible and over-reported classification, with the novel method identifying more over-reported entries. While rEI showed no relationships with anthropometric measurements, applying both methods reduced bias. The novel method showed greater bias reduction, suggesting that it may have superior performance when identifying plausible rEI. Clinical trials registration NCT04465721. Graphical Abstract
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