Title of article
Number of days, number of subjects, and sources of variation in longitudinal intervention or crossover feeding trials with multiple days of measurement
Author/Authors
Hill، James D. نويسنده , , Grunwald، Gary K. نويسنده , , Sullivan، Debra K. نويسنده , , Hise، Mary نويسنده , , Donnelly، Joseph E. نويسنده , , Jacobsen، Dennis J. نويسنده , , Johnson، Susan L نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-1086
From page
1087
To page
0
Abstract
Dietary studies are often conducted as longitudinal intervention or crossover trials using multiple days of measurement on each subject during each of several measurement periods, and determining the required numbers of days and subjects is important in designing these studies. Linear mixed statistical models were used to derive equations for precision, statistical power and sample size (number of days and number of subjects) and to obtain estimates of between-subject, period-to-period, and day-to-day variation needed to apply the equations. Two cohorts of an on-going exercise intervention study, and a crossover study of Olestra, each with 14d of measurement/subject per period, were used to obtain estimates of variability for energy and macronutrient intake. Numerical examples illustrate how the equations for calculating the number of days or number of subjects are applied in typical situations, and sample SAS code is given. It was found that between-subject, period-to-period, and day-to-day variation all contributed significantly to the variation in energy and macronutrient intake. The ratio of period-to-period and day-to-day standard deviations controls the trade-off between the number of days and the number of subjects, and this remained relatively stable across studies and energy and macronutrient intake variables. The greatest gains in precision were seen over the first few measurement days. Greater precision and fewer required days were noted in the study (Olestra) that exerted greater control over the subjects and diets during the feeding protocol.
Keywords
Dietary assessment: Dietary intake: Dietary variability: Within-subject variation: Between-subject variation
Journal title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Record number
89591
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