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Results of a Study Comparing Glycated Albumin to Other Glycemic Indices.

Authors :
Desouza CV
Holcomb RG
Rosenstock J
Frias JP
Hsia SH
Klein EJ
Zhou R
Kohzuma T
Fonseca VA
Source :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism [J Clin Endocrinol Metab] 2020 Mar 01; Vol. 105 (3).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Context: Intermediate-term glycemic control metrics fulfill a need for measures beyond hemoglobin A1C.<br />Objective: Compare glycated albumin (GA), a 14-day blood glucose measure, with other glycemic indices.<br />Design: 24-week prospective study of assay performance.<br />Setting: 8 US clinics.<br />Participants: Subjects with type 1 (n = 73) and type 2 diabetes (n = 77) undergoing changes to improve glycemic control (n = 98) or with stable diabetes therapy (n = 52).<br />Interventions: GA, fructosamine, and A1C measured at prespecified intervals. Mean blood glucose (MBG) calculated using weekly self-monitored blood glucose profiles.<br />Main Outcome Measures: Primary: Pearson correlation between GA and fructosamine. Secondary: magnitude (Spearman correlation) and direction (Kendall correlation) of change of glycemic indices in the first 3 months after a change in diabetes management.<br />Results: GA was more concordant (60.8%) with changes in MBG than fructosamine (55.5%) or A1C (45.5%). Across all subjects and visits, the GA Pearson correlation with fructosamine was 0.920. Pearson correlations with A1C were 0.655 for GA and 0.515 for fructosamine (P < .001) and with MBG were 0.590 and 0.454, respectively (P < .001). At the individual subject level, Pearson correlations with both A1C and MBG were higher for GA than for fructosamine in 56% of subjects; only 4% of subjects had higher fructosamine correlations with A1C and MBG. GA had a higher Pearson correlation with A1C and MBG in 82% and 70% of subjects, respectively.<br />Conclusions: Compared with fructosamine, GA correlates significantly better with both short-term MBG and long-term A1C and may be more useful than fructosamine in clinical situations requiring monitoring of intermediate-term glycemic control (NCT02489773).<br /> (© Endocrine Society 2019.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1945-7197
Volume :
105
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31650161
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgz087