142-OR: A1C and Average Glucose Discordance—Personalized A1C Improves the Discrepancy, Particularly in Black Individuals

IF 6.2 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Diabetes Pub Date : 2024-06-21 DOI:10.2337/db24-142-or
RAMZI AJJAN, TIMOTHY DUNN, YONGJIN XU, PRATIK CHOUDHARY
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Abstract

Introduction: Black individuals with diabetes have greater hypoglycemic hospitalizations, perhaps due to overtreatment of elevated laboratory A1C compared to average glucose (AG), related to altered red blood cell (RBC) biology. Our aim was to evaluate the size of the problem and improve A1C accuracy using a new glycemic marker. Methods: Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and bi-monthly A1C were collected in a 26-week study of adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes across different race groups. RBC personal glycation ratio (PGR) was determined at 12 weeks and used to calculate personalized A1C (pA1C) with this new glycemic marker assessed against paired 56-day AG-derived A1C. Results: Of 811 A1C and AG-derived A1C comparisons in 245 individuals, 34% displayed greater than 0.5% disagreement. This was reduced to 13% using pA1C, with the largest improvement detected in 56 Black individuals (reducing from 42% deviation rate for A1C to 17% for pA1C, Figure). For A1C values <7%, more than 0.5% discrepancy between A1C and AG-derived A1C for the whole group and Black individuals was lowered from 27% and 34%, respectively, to 5% and 9% with pA1C. Conclusion: Clinically significant A1C and AG-derived A1C discordance is common, particularly in Black individuals. Personalized A1C addresses this discrepancy potentially improving clinical management in diabetes and reducing health disparities. Disclosure R. Ajjan: Research Support; Abbott. Speaker's Bureau; Abbott. Advisory Panel; Abbott, AstraZeneca, Novo Nordisk. Speaker's Bureau; Boehringer-Ingelheim. Research Support; Diabetes UK. Advisory Panel; Eli Lilly and Company, Sanofi. T. Dunn: Employee; Abbott. Y. Xu: None. P. Choudhary: Advisory Panel; Abbott, Biolinq. Speaker's Bureau; Dexcom, Inc., Eli Lilly and Company, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi. Advisory Panel; Ypsomed AG, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated.
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142-OR: A1C 和平均血糖不一致--个性化 A1C 可改善差异,尤其是黑人的差异
导言:与平均血糖(AG)相比,黑人糖尿病患者的低血糖住院率更高,这可能是由于过度治疗实验室 A1C 升高所致,与红细胞(RBC)生物学改变有关。我们的目的是评估问题的严重程度,并使用一种新的血糖标记物提高 A1C 的准确性。方法在一项为期 26 周的研究中,对不同种族的 1 型或 2 型糖尿病成人患者进行了连续血糖监测 (CGM) 和双月 A1C 采集。在 12 周时测定红细胞个人糖化比值 (PGR),并利用这一新的血糖标志物计算个人化 A1C (pA1C),与配对的 56 天 AG 派生 A1C 进行评估。结果:在对 245 人进行的 811 次 A1C 和 AG 导出 A1C 比较中,34% 的比较结果显示差异大于 0.5%。使用 pA1C 后,这一比例降至 13%,其中 56 名黑人的改善幅度最大(A1C 的偏差率从 42% 降至 pA1C 的 17%,如图)。对于 A1C 值<7%,使用 pA1C 后,全组和黑人的 A1C 与 AG 导出的 A1C 之间超过 0.5% 的差异分别从 27% 和 34% 降低到 5% 和 9%。结论临床上明显的 A1C 和 AG 导出 A1C 不一致很常见,尤其是在黑人中。个性化 A1C 可以解决这一差异,从而改善糖尿病的临床管理,减少健康差异。披露 R. Ajjan:研究支持;雅培。Speaker's Bureau; Abbott.顾问团;雅培、阿斯利康、诺和诺德。发言人办公室;勃林格殷格翰公司。研究支持;英国糖尿病协会。顾问团;礼来公司、赛诺菲。T. Dunn:雅培公司雇员。Y. Xu:无。P. Choudhary:顾问团成员;雅培、Biolinq。Speaker's Bureau;Dexcom, Inc.、礼来公司、诺和诺德、赛诺菲。顾问团;Ypsomed AG、Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated。
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来源期刊
Diabetes
Diabetes 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
2.60%
发文量
1968
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Diabetes is a scientific journal that publishes original research exploring the physiological and pathophysiological aspects of diabetes mellitus. We encourage submissions of manuscripts pertaining to laboratory, animal, or human research, covering a wide range of topics. Our primary focus is on investigative reports investigating various aspects such as the development and progression of diabetes, along with its associated complications. We also welcome studies delving into normal and pathological pancreatic islet function and intermediary metabolism, as well as exploring the mechanisms of drug and hormone action from a pharmacological perspective. Additionally, we encourage submissions that delve into the biochemical and molecular aspects of both normal and abnormal biological processes. However, it is important to note that we do not publish studies relating to diabetes education or the application of accepted therapeutic and diagnostic approaches to patients with diabetes mellitus. Our aim is to provide a platform for research that contributes to advancing our understanding of the underlying mechanisms and processes of diabetes.
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