BACKGROUND:Aspirin (ASA) and vitamins C and E may inhibit non-enzymatic glycation in vivo and may also interfere with HbA(1c) assays, masking true results. We investigated the effect of usual doses of ASA, vitamin C and E on HbA1c levels in a group of non-diabetic volunteers. METHODS: A randomized clinical trial was performed with 28 healthy non-diabetic individuals. Subjects were allocated to take ASA 200 mg/day, vitamin C 1 g/day, vitamin E 400 mg/day, or to a control group, for a period of 4 months. Blood samples were collected at baseline and at monthly intervals for HbA1c analysis by HPLC Variant II (BioRad), HPLC L-9100 (Merck - Hitachi) and Tina Quant HbA(1c) II immunoassay (Roche). RESULTS:HbA(1c) levels of the control, vitamin C and E groups did not change throughout the study, independently of the method used. HbA(1c) measured by Hitachi L-9100 HPLC increased significantly (P=0.033) at 4 months after ASA intake, although this increase was of only 0.17%. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with vitamins C and E in pharmacological doses does not have any impact on HbA1c measurements in non-diabetic patients with the three methods employed. ASA induces a modest, not clinically relevant, increase in HbA1c levels with one of the methods.
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BACKGROUND:Aspirin (ASA) and vitamins C and E may inhibit non-enzymatic glycation in vivo and may also interfere with HbA(1c) assays, masking true results. We investigated the effect of usual doses of ASA, vitamin C and E on HbA1c levels in a group of non-diabetic volunteers. METHODS: A randomized clinical trial was performed with 28 healthy non-diabetic individuals. Subjects were allocated to take ASA 200 mg/day, vitamin C 1 g/day, vitamin E 400 mg/day, or to a control group, for a period of 4 months. Blood samples were collected at baseline and at monthly intervals for HbA1c analysis by HPLC Variant II (BioRad), HPLC L-9100 (Merck - Hitachi) and Tina Quant HbA(1c) II immunoassay (Roche). RESULTS: HbA(1c) levels of the control, vitamin C and E groups did not change throughout the study, independently of the method used. HbA(1c) measured by Hitachi L-9100 HPLC increased significantly (P=0.033) at 4 months after ASA intake, although this increase was of only 0.17%. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with vitamins C and E in pharmacological doses does not have any impact on HbA1c measurements in non-diabeticpatients with the three methods employed. ASA induces a modest, not clinically relevant, increase in HbA1c levels with one of the methods.
Authors: B Mianowska; W Fendler; A Szadkowska; A Baranowska; E Grzelak-Agaciak; J Sadon; H Keenan; W Mlynarski Journal: Diabetologia Date: 2010-12-25 Impact factor: 10.122