Abstract
We evaluated the agreement in reported alcohol consumption between a standard food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and a risk factor questionnaire (RFQ) developed for a genetic epidemiologic study of breast cancer. The FFQ measured intake of alcoholic beverages by asking which of nine levels were consumed during a single time period. In contrast, the RFQ used open-ended questions to measure intake of alcoholic beverages during numerous time periods. Subjects (N = 765) completed both questionnaires at home. Mean daily alcohol consumption levels were consistently higher in the FFQ than in the RFQ; for example, the mean alcohol consumption for all subjects was 7.0 g/day in the FFQ versus 5.3 g/day in the RFQ. Moreover, the RFQ overestimated the number of nondrinkers relative to the FFQ. Nonetheless, the Spearman correlation coefficients between daily alcohol consumption levels as measured by the two questionnaires were relatively high: total alcohol, r = 0.72; beer, r = 0.69; wine, r = 0.69; and distilled spirits, r = 0.54. The reasonable agreement between these questionnaires supports the validity of historical alcohol consumption levels measured by the RFQ.

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