| Literature DB >> 21525453 |
Enzo Bonora1, Jaakko Tuomilehto.
Abstract
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21525453 PMCID: PMC3632159 DOI: 10.2337/dc11-s216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Reasons to prefer A1C compared with plasma glucose determination for diagnosing diabetes
| Chronic hyperglycemia is captured by A1C but not by FPG (even when repeated twice). |
| Microangiopathic complications (retinopathy) are associated with A1C as strongly as with FPG. |
| A1C is better related to cardiovascular disease than FPG. |
| Fasting is not needed for A1C assessment. |
| No acute perturbations (e.g., stress, diet, exercise, smoking) affect A1C. |
| A1C has a greater pre-analytical stability than blood glucose. |
| A1C has an analytical variability not inferior to blood glucose. |
| Standardization of A1C assay is not inferior to blood glucose assay. |
| Biological variability of A1C is lower than FPG and 2-h OGTT PG. |
| Individual susceptibility to protein glycation might be caught by A1C. |
| A1C can be used concomitantly for diagnosing and initiating diabetes monitoring. |
| Diabetes assessment with A1C assay is not necessarily greater than with glucose assessment. |
Reasons not to prefer A1C compared with plasma glucose determination for diagnosing diabetes
| Diabetes is clinically defined by high blood glucose and not by glycation of proteins. |
| A1C is a poor marker of important pathophysiological abnormalities featuring diabetes. |
| A1C has a poor sensitivity in diabetes diagnosis and would change the epidemiology of diabetes. |
| 2-h glucose level and IGT are stronger predictors of CVD than A1C. |
| Fasting is not essential to identify perturbation in glucose metabolism. |
| Standardization of A1C assay is poor, even in Western countries, and standardization of glucose assay would be easier to implement. |
| In many subjects, A1C assay is unreliable and cannot be used. |
| A1C has significant differences in various ethnic groups, which are poorly understood and characterized. |
| Within-days biological variability of plasma glucose might unveil disturbance of glucose metabolism. |
| Individual susceptibility to glycation of hemoglobin is not relevant to diabetes diagnosis. |
| Using the same biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring diabetes might have negative effects. |
| Cost of the assay: glucose is unquestionably cheaper than A1C, and A1C assay is not available on a large scale in most of the countries. |
| A1C levels vary not only according to glycemia, but also to erythrocyte turnover rates (e.g., hemoglobinopathies, malaria, anemia, blood loss) as well as other factors. |
| Correlation between A1C and FPG is ~0.85%, which means that as many as 30% of the variation in FPG is not explained by A1C and vice versa. |
| Nothing is known about changes in A1C during the development of diabetes. |
| A1C levels of 6.0–6.5% do not predict diabetes as effectively as FPG and 2-h PG (OGTT). |
| Sensitivity of A1C to detect diabetes defined by the OGTT is <50%; thus, the majority of diabetic individuals will remain undiagnosed if A1C is used. |
| The levels of A1C predicting future retinopathy, nephropathy, etc., in the population is not well established (<6.5%?). |
| No diabetes prevention trials have selected their populations based on A1C. |
| Using A1C will delay the diagnosis of diabetes in ~60% of incident cases. |