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dc.contributor.authorWright FLen
dc.contributor.authorGreen Jen
dc.contributor.authorReeves Gen
dc.contributor.authorBeral Ven
dc.contributor.authorCairns BJen
dc.contributor.authorfor the Million Women Study Collaborators (incl. Canfell K)en
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/30743
dc.description.abstractBACKGROUND: In prospective epidemiological studies, anthropometry is often self-reported and may be subject to reporting errors. Self-reported anthropometric data are reasonably accurate when compared with measurements made at the same time, but reporting errors and changes over time in anthropometric characteristics could potentially generate time-dependent biases in disease-exposure associations. METHODS: In a sample of about 4000 middle-aged UK women from a large prospective cohort study, we compared repeated self-reports of weight, height, derived body mass index, and waist and hip circumferences, obtained between 1999 and 2008, with clinical measurements taken in 2008. For self-reported and measured values of each variable, mean differences, correlation coefficients, and regression dilution ratios (which measure relative bias in estimates of linear association) were compared over time. RESULTS: For most variables, the differences between self-reported and measured values were small. On average, reported values tended to be lower than measured values (i.e. under-reported) for all variables except height; under-reporting was greatest for waist circumference. As expected, the greater the elapsed time between self-report and measurement, the larger the mean differences between them (each P < 0.001 for trend), and the weaker their correlations (each P < 0.004 for trend). Regression dilution ratios were in general close to 1.0 and did not vary greatly over time. CONCLUSION: Reporting errors in anthropometric variables may result in small biases to estimates of associations with disease outcomes. Weaker correlations between self-reported and measured values would result in some loss of study power over time. Overall, however, our results provide new evidence that self-reported anthropometric variables remain suitable for use in analyses of associations with disease outcomes in cohort studies over at least a decade of follow-up.en
dc.description.sponsorshipWe thank the Million Women Study coordinating center staff and our collaborators. Funding for this study was provided by the Medical Research Council (grant MR/K02700X/1), Cancer Research UK (grant no. C570/A11692), and the NHS Cancer Screening Programme (reference no. R19220/CN002). Dr Cairns acknowledges support from the BHF Centre of Research Excellence, Oxford (British Heart Foundation grant RE/13/1/30181). The study is registered with the NHS National Institute of Health Research Portfolio (study number 3795). General practices were reimbursed for conducting the data collection through NHS Service Support Cost funding of the National Institute of Health Research.
dc.publisherBMC Medical Research Methodologyen
dc.rightsOther
dc.subject.otherEtiology - Resources and Infrastructureen
dc.titleValidity over time of self-reported anthropometric variables during follow-up of a large cohort of UK womenen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.identifier.doi10.1186/s12874-015-0075-1
dc.relation.otherFunding for this study was provided by the Medical Research Council (grant MR/K02700X/1), Cancer Research UK (grant no. C570/A11692), and the NHS Cancer Screening Programme (reference no. R19220/CN002). Dr Cairns acknowledges support from the BHF Centre of Research Excellence, Oxford (British Heart Foundation grant RE/13/1/30181).en
usyd.facultyFaculty of Medicine and Health, The Daffodil Centreen


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