4.5 Article

Validation of diet and urinary excretion derived estimates of sodium excretion against 24-h urine excretion in a worksite sample

Journal

NUTRITION METABOLISM AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
Volume 25, Issue 8, Pages 771-779

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.numecd.2015.04.010

Keywords

Dietary sodium; Urinary sodium; 24-h dietary recall; 24-h urine collection; Spot urine

Funding

  1. HRB Centre for Health & Diet Research grant - Irish Health Research Board [HRC2007/13]
  2. Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
  3. Irish Heart Foundation

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Background and aims: To validate diet and urinary excretion derived estimates of sodium intake against those derived from 24-h urine collections in an Irish manufacturing work-place sample. Methods and results: We have compared daily sodium (Na) excretion from PABA validated 24-h urine collections with estimated daily sodium excretion derived from the following methods: a standard Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ), a modified 24-h dietary recall method, arithmetic extrapolations from morning and evening spot urine samples, predicted sodium excretion from morning and evening spot urine samples using Tanaka's, Kawasaki's and the INTERSALT formula. All were assessed using mean differences (SD), Bland-Altman plots, correlation coefficients and ROC Area under the Curve (AUC) for a cut off of >= 100 mmol of Na/day. The Food Choice at Work study recruited 802 participants aged 18-64 years, 50 of whom formed the validation sample. The mean measured 24-h urinary sodium (gold standard) was 138 mmol/day (8.1 g salt). At the group level, mean differences were small for both dietary methods and for the arithmetic extrapolations from morning urine samples. The Tanaka, Kawasaki and INTERSALT methods provided biased estimates of 24-h urinary sodium. R-2 values for all methods ranged from 0.1 to 0.48 and AUC findings from 0.57 to 0.76. Conclusion: Neither dietary nor spot urine sample methods provide adequate validity in the estimation of 24-h urinary sodium at the individual level. However, group mean errors from dietary methods are small and random and compare favourably with those from spot urine samples in this population. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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