Use of the Estimated Average Glucose e AG
- Slides: 20
Use of the Estimated Average Glucose (e. AG) in Patient Care Part 2 of 2 www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: Glucose Monitoring • CGM – mean of ~ 2, 400 measurements per participant • Life. Scan meter ~ mean of 300 measurements per participant – Mean of ~ 25 measurements per week – Goal was a minimum of 21 tests per week • Total ~ 2, 700 measurements/participant during 12 weeks www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: Analyses • CGM results corrected upward by 5% to be consistent with BG • Each glucose measure weighted in proportion to the inverse of total number of measurements on that day (each day had equal weight) • Arithmetic mean glucose calculated for each participant • Linear regression model used to estimate relationship between average glucose and the 3 - month Hb. A 1 c www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: Study Success Calc. AG (mmol/L) 90% of cohort values fall in this range Hb. A 1 c (%) 90% of values fell within +/- 15% www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
AG (mg/dl) ADAG Study: Correlation of AG With Hb. A 1 c AG (mg/dl) = 28. 7 x Hb. A 1 c – 46. 7 R 2 = 0. 84 P < 0. 0001 Hb. A 1 c (%) www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: Correlation of AG with Hb. A 1 c: CGM data vs. Meter No difference in relationship (P=0. 18) whether Life. Scan or CGMS data used Hb. A 1 c (%) www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: Other Factors Examined • Does the Hb. A 1 c-Average Glucose relationship differ by: - Type 1 or type 2 diabetes NO - Diabetes or no diabetes NO - Amount of glucose variability NO - Gender NO - Age NO - Ethnicity/Race NO (but trend toward higher Hb. A 1 c per AG in African and African-American participants vs. whites, P=0. 07) - Smoking NO www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study Excluded Known Sources of “Inaccuracy” of Hb. A 1 c • • • Hemoglobinopathy Anemia Pregnancy Hepatic or renal disease Etc. www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study Conclusion: Hb. A 1 c Correlates Highly With AG 450 400 AG (mg/dl) 350 AG (mg/dl) = 28. 7 x Hb. A 1 c – 46. 7 300 250 200 150 100 50 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Measured Hb. A 1 c (%) www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
Implications • Tight correlation between Hb. A 1 c and AG allows us to translate Hb. A 1 c into an estimated Average Glucose (e. AG) • e. AG will apply to the majority of patients with diabetes – Barring “traditional” conditions interfering with the assay or the relationship between glycemia and Hb. A 1 c www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
ADAG Study: “Translation” of Hb. A 1 c into e. AG Hb. A 1 c (%) 5 6 7 8 9 10 www. diabetes. org e. AG (mg/dl) (mmol/l)_ 97 5. 4 126 7. 0 154 8. 6 183 10. 2 212 11. 8 240 13. 4 1 -800 -DIABETES
Note that the numbers are different Hb. A 1 c (%) 6 7 8 9 10 www. diabetes. org ADAG DCCT (mg/dl)______ 126 135 154 170 183 205 212 240 275 1 -800 -DIABETES
Consensus Statement FCC, EASD, IDF, ADA Sept 2007) • Hb. A 1 c assay to be standardized worldwide using the new IFCC standard and expressed as: – % as currently used (DCCT values) – IFCC units in mmol HBA 1 c/mol Hb. A – e. AG in mmol/l or mg/d. L (if ADAG study meets its data acceptability goals) • This paved the way for reporting both Hb. A 1 c and EAG on lab reports Diabetes Care and Diabetologia, 2007 www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
What Won’t Change…And What’s New • To a clinician, there is no change in the Hb. A 1 c assay • To clinical chemists, there is a new IFCC standard in the background • We have the potential for a valuable educational tool for patients www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
A Typical Patient Encounter “So, Mrs. Smith, it looks like you do have diabetes. Your average blood sugar is around 200. When people don’t have diabetes, this number is below 125. We need to work with you to try to get this number, the average glucose, down below 150 over the next few months with some weight loss, exercise, and a medication. Let’s talk some more about what you can do…” www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
A Typical Patient Encounter “Wow, I’m not happy to hear that…I know that diabetes can do some bad things. Tell me what I can do to get my average glucose down. ” www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
What is ADA Doing to Promote Use of e. AG in Patient Care? • Health care provider education – – ADA Scientific Sessions, June ’ 08 American Association of Clinical Chemists, August ‘ 08 AADE Annual Meeting, August ‘ 08 e. AG calculators (handheld and on professional. diabetes. org) • Patient education – – Website Diabetes Forecast magazine, books Pamphlets and brochures ADA will include term “average glucose” in all consumer pieces www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
What Can Clinicians and Educators Do? • Choose which term—A 1 C or Average Glucose— to use with each patient (some may already be used to A 1 C) • In verbal communications, no need to say “estimated” • We want to keep the A in A, B, Cs • Use updated table, calculator on www. diabetes. org, or other tools to convert A 1 C to average glucose • “Lobby” your lab to report both numbers www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
What Can Clinical Chemists Do? • Even with tools, most clinicians will not take the time to calculate conversions • Reporting both Hb. A 1 c (DCCT-aligned) AND e. AG on lab reports will do the most to promote wide use of the term • Professional and patient education may drive demand • Conversion is a simple regression equation www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
Average Glucose Blood pressure Cholesterol to help make the “A” understandable! www. diabetes. org 1 -800 -DIABETES
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