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A1c is Changing to Average Mean Blood Glucose

A1C Translation to Estimated Average Glucose (eAG) Units Will Yield Easier

Patient Education.�New more accurate formula used to convert A1c to average

blood

glucose.

A mathematical relationship between the average glucose level over the preceding

three months and levels of the A1C test, thus yielding translation of the

A1C for reporting as estimated average glucose (eAG), was proven in an

international study published online in the August issue of Diabetes Care.

A1C has been used for more than 25 years as the major measure of glucose control

and to establish targets for diabetes therapy. “The findings of this large

study have confirmed what smaller studies have shown and will give us confidence

that A1C really does represent an average glucose because we now have

a reliable formula to convert A1C into average glucose,†said M. ,

MD, Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, and cochair of the

International

A1C-Derived Average Glucose (ADAG) Study, in a recent interview. “While eAG

will not replace A1C, physicians will be able to obtain reports both in A1C

units of glycated hemoglobin and eAG units of milligrams per deciliter or

millimols per liter, depending on the country, and choose which to use in

clinical

situations.â€

The implications of using eAG in mg/dl or mmol/L – the same units that

patients use for self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) at home – were

discussed

recently by his co-chair, J. Heine, MD, PhD, Professor of Diabetology in

the Department of Endocrinology at the VU University Medical Center in

Amsterdam, and Executive Medical Director of the Diabetes and Endocrine Division

of Eli Lilly and Company.

“It is extremely helpful for health care professionals and patients to be

using the same language to discuss glucose goals,†said Dr. Heine. “Since

patients

sometimes find it difficult to understand the concept of glycated hemoglobin, it

will be much easier to have all test results – both those from the lab

and those the patient performs – in the same units.â€

With A1C translated from a difficult-to-understand chemical entity into an

easy-to-understand value that relates to the patient’s every day home glucose

monitoring, Dr. Heine predicts that eAG will prove to be a valuable “When

health care professionals set goals based on eAG units, then patients will know

how close they are to reaching their goals every day when they test at home with

self-monitoring,†said Dr. Heine.

A group of international investigators conducted a 10-center study to try to

define, as accurately as possible, the relationship between average blood

glucose

levels and A1C. The study recruited 507 volunteers of various races and

ethnicities: 268 type 1, 152 type 2, and 80 without diabetes. The study measured

A1Cs in a central laboratory monthly for 3 months, and measured average glucose

levels using a combination of continuous glucose monitoring and frequent

self-monitoring of blood glucose levels.

" We developed an equation that can be interpreted accurately as an estimated

average glucose level by comparing the measurement of A1C with the average

glucose levels,†explained S. Horton, MD, Professor of Medicine,

Harvard Medical School, and a co-author of the ADAG study.

Study investigators found a simple linear relationship. “Although the tight

and consistent relationship across different subgroups suggest that, for most

people, there are no important factors that affect the relationship between A1C

and average glucose.

The American Diabetes Association (ADA), European Association for the Study of

Diabetes (EASD), and International Diabetes Federation (IDF) will be working

together to conduct educational efforts to make both patients and providers

aware of this new terminology, and help to understand the relationship between

A1C and AG. In the meantime, the American Diabetes Association announced that

physicians can visit its Web site at www.diabetes.org to purchase a very

inexpensive handheld calculator that will provide an instant conversion of A1C

values to eAG.

To convert an A1c to the new average mean blood glucose, use this formula:

eAG(mg/dl) = (28.7 X HbA1c) – 46.7

So the old method has an A1c of 6% at an average blood glucose of 135mg/Dl, and

using the new formula will give you 126mg/DL, and a 7% A1c now equals a

eAG of 154mg/DL instead of 170mg/DL.

table with 3 columns and 9 rows

A1c

Average Blood Glucose mg/dL.

eAG (New) mg/dL

5%

100

97

6%

135

126

7%

170

154

8%

205

183

9%

240

212

10%

275

240

11%

269

310

12%

298

380

table end

See this week’s tool for an easy to use handout for your patients.

Presented at the American Diabetes Association’s 68th Annual Scientific

Sessions.

====================================================

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