Showing posts with label eAG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eAG. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2012

HbA1c and Estimated Average Glucose (eAG)

Source of this information: ADA and http://www.ngsp.org/A1ceAG.asp


There is a very predictable relationship between HbA1c and AG. 
Understanding this relationship can help patients with diabetes and their health-care providers set day-to-day targets for AG based on HbA1c goals
Fasting glucose should be used with caution as a surrogate measure of AG. 
Finally, it is important to remember that HbA1c is a weighted average of glucose levels during the preceding 4 months. Unless the patient’s glucose levels are very stable month after month, quarterly measurement is needed to insure that a patient's glycemic control remains within the target range. 

How does HbA1c relate to average glucose (AG)?

In the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial or DCCT (New Engl J Med 1993;329:977-986) study of patients with Type 1 diabetes, quarterly HbA1c determinations were the principal measure of glycemic control; study subjects also performed quarterly 24-hour, 7-point capillary-blood glucose profiles. 
Blood specimens were obtained by subjects in the home setting, pre-meal, 90 minutes post-meal, and at bed-time. In an analysis of the DCCT glucose profile data (Diabetes Care 25:275-278, 2002), mean HbA1c and AG were calculated for each study subject (n= 1439). Results showed a linear relationship between HbA1c and AG 
(AG(mg/dL) = ( 35.6 x HbA1c ) - 77.3), with a Pearson correlation coefficient (r) of 0.82.
CALCULATOR: The following link will help to do the Estimated Average Glucose Calculation
http://professional.diabetes.org/GlucoseCalculator.aspx :




HbA1c (%)
eAG (mg/dL)
eAG (mmol/l)
5
97
5.4
6
126
7.0
7
154
8.6
8
183
10.2
9
212
11.8
10
240
13.4
11
269
14.9
12
298
16.5

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

HbA1C - The new way of measuring it - IN future!!

There have been multiple attempts in Global Standarizations and consensus statements have been issued, but very difficult to implement.
In the US we still follow HbA1c in % and eAG ( estimated average glucose) is just catching up.
US guidelines developed based on he National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP)
Two major measurement criteria:  International Federation of Clinical Chemistry (IFCC) units vs NGSP 

IFCC-HbA1cDCCT- HbA1cMono S- HbA1c
(mmol/mol)(%)(%)
103.12.0
204.02.9
304.93.9
405.84.8
456.35.3
506.75.8
557.26.3
607.66.8
658.17.2
708.67.7
809.58.7
9010.49.6
10011.310.6
The International Diabetes Federation and American College of Endocrinology recommend HbA1c values below 48 mmol/mol (6.5%), while American Diabetes Association recommends that the HbA1c be below 53 mmol/mol (7.0%) for most patients.[




2010 Consensus Statement on the Worldwide Standardization of HbA1c







The recommendations are:
  1. HbA1c test results should be standardized worldwide, including the reference system and results reporting.
  2. The IFCC reference system for HbA1c represents the only valid anchor to implement standardisation of the measurement.
  3. HbA1c results are to be reported by clinical laboratories worldwide in SI (Système International) units (mmol/mol – no decimals) and derived NGSP units (% - one decimal), using the IFCC-NGSP master equation (DCCT units).
  4. HbA1c conversion tables including both SI (IFCC) and NGSP units should be easily accessible to the diabetes community.
  5. Editors of journals and other printed material are strongly recommended to require that submitted manuscripts report HbA1c in both SI (IFCC) and NGSP/DCCT units.
  6. The reportable term for glycated hemoglobin is HbA1c, although other abbreviations may be used in guidelines and educational material (A1C).