Results of a Study Comparing Glycated Albumin to Other Glycemic Indices

Author:

Desouza Cyrus V1ORCID,Holcomb Richard G2,Rosenstock Julio3ORCID,Frias Juan P4,Hsia Stanley H4ORCID,Klein Eric J5,Zhou Rong6,Kohzuma Takuji7ORCID,Fonseca Vivian A8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska

2. Quintiles Consulting, Inc., Rockville, Maryland

3. Dallas Diabetes Research Center at Medical City, Dallas, Texas

4. National Research Institute, Los Angeles, California

5. Capital Medical Center, Olympia, Washington

6. Medpace, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio

7. Asahi Kasei Pharma, Tokyo, Japan

8. Tulane University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112

Abstract

Abstract Context Intermediate-term glycemic control metrics fulfill a need for measures beyond hemoglobin A1C. Objective Compare glycated albumin (GA), a 14-day blood glucose measure, with other glycemic indices. Design 24-week prospective study of assay performance. Setting 8 US clinics. Participants Subjects with type 1 (n = 73) and type 2 diabetes (n = 77) undergoing changes to improve glycemic control (n = 98) or with stable diabetes therapy (n = 52). Interventions GA, fructosamine, and A1C measured at prespecified intervals. Mean blood glucose (MBG) calculated using weekly self-monitored blood glucose profiles. Main Outcome Measures Primary: Pearson correlation between GA and fructosamine. Secondary: magnitude (Spearman correlation) and direction (Kendall correlation) of change of glycemic indices in the first 3 months after a change in diabetes management. Results GA was more concordant (60.8%) with changes in MBG than fructosamine (55.5%) or A1C (45.5%). Across all subjects and visits, the GA Pearson correlation with fructosamine was 0.920. Pearson correlations with A1C were 0.655 for GA and 0.515 for fructosamine (P < .001) and with MBG were 0.590 and 0.454, respectively (P < .001). At the individual subject level, Pearson correlations with both A1C and MBG were higher for GA than for fructosamine in 56% of subjects; only 4% of subjects had higher fructosamine correlations with A1C and MBG. GA had a higher Pearson correlation with A1C and MBG in 82% and 70% of subjects, respectively. Conclusions Compared with fructosamine, GA correlates significantly better with both short-term MBG and long-term A1C and may be more useful than fructosamine in clinical situations requiring monitoring of intermediate-term glycemic control (NCT02489773).

Funder

Asahi Kasei Pharma Corporation

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

Louisiana Clinical and Translational Science Center

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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