Metabolic Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD
Research Study Abstract
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Measurement of Active and Sedentary Behavior in Context of Large Epidemiologic Studies
- Published on Feb 2018
Introduction/Purpose: To assess the utility of measurement methods that may be more accurate and precise than traditional questionnaire-based estimates of habitual physical activity and sedentary behavior we compared the measurement properties of a past year questionnaire (AARP) and more comprehensive measures: an internet-based 24-h recall (ACT24), and a variety of estimates from an accelerometer (ActiGraph).
Methods: Participants were 932 adults (50–74 yr) in a 12-month study that included reference measures of energy expenditure from doubly labeled water (DLW) and active and sedentary time via activPAL.
Results: Accuracy at the group level (mean differences) was generally better for both ACT24 and ActiGraph than the AARP questionnaire. The AARP accuracy for energy expenditure ranged from −4% to −13% lower than DLW, but its accuracy was poorer for physical activity duration (−48%) and sedentary time (−18%) versus activPAL. In contrast, ACT24 accuracy was within 3% to 10% of DLW expenditure measures and within 1% to 3% of active and sedentary time from activPAL. For ActiGraph, accuracy for energy expenditure was best for the Crouter 2-regression method (−2% to −7%), and for active and sedentary time the 100 counts per minute cutpoint was most accurate (−1% to 2%) at the group level. One administration of the AARP questionnaire was significantly correlated with long-term average from the reference measures (ρTX = 0.16–0.34) overall, but four ACT24 recalls had higher correlations (ρTX = 0.48–0.60), as did 4 d of ActiGraph assessment (ρTX = 0.54–0.87).
Conclusions: New exposure assessments suitable for use in large epidemiologic studies (ACT24, ActiGraph) were more accurate and had higher correlations than a traditional questionnaire. Use of better more comprehensive measures in future epidemiologic studies could yield new etiologic discoveries and possibly new opportunities for prevention.
Author(s)
- MATTHEWS, CHARLES E. 1
- KOZEY KEADLE, SARAH 1,2
- MOORE, STEVEN C. 1
- SCHOELLER, DALE S. 3
- CARROLL, RAYMOND J. 4,5
- TROIANO, RICHARD P. 6
- SAMPSON, JOSHUA N. 7
Institution(s)
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1
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2 Kinesiology Department, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA
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3 University of Wisconsin, Biotech Center and Nutritional Sciences, Madison, WI
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4 Department of Statistics, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
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5 School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, AUSTRALIA
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6 Risk Factor Assessment Branch, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD
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7 Biostatistics Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD
Journal
Med Sci Sports Exerc