REVISTA DE INVESTIGACIÓN CLÍNICA Contents available at PubMed www.clinicalandtranslationalinvestigation.com PERMANYER www.permanyer.com Rev Inves Clin. 2015;67:76-9 BRIEF REVIEW Glycated Hemoglobin, Fasting, Two-hour Post-challenge and Postprandial Glycemia in the Diagnosis and Treatment © Permanyer Publications 2015 .rehsilbup eht fo noissimrep nettirw roirp eht tuohtiw gniypocotohp ro decudorper eb yam noitacilbup siht fo trap oN trap fo siht noitacilbup yam eb decudorper ro of Diabetesgniypocotohp tuohtiw Mellitus:eht roirp Arenettirw We Givingnoissimrep fo eht Them .rehsilbup the Right Interpretation and Use? Francisco J. Gómez-Pérez* Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán, México, D.F., Mexico ABSTRACT This brief review is aimed to point out the importance of considering glycated hemoglobin, fasting blood glucose, post-glucose-load glycemia, and postprandial glycemia into an evolutive and dynamic criteria that may grant a better concept and understanding of the diagnostic and therapeutic status of individual patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus. (REV INVES CLIN. 2015;67:76-9) Corresponding author: Francisco J. Gómez-Pérez, [email protected] Key words: Diagnosis. Therapeutic decisions. HbA1c. Timing of tests. INTRODUCTION clinical trials, relating these cut-off points to the de- velopment of chronic complications of diabetes2,3. The absence of a genetic marker for type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) makes it difficult to establish with These criteria for T2DM diagnosis, supported since certainty the exact diagnosis and to define exactly 20074 by the American Diabetes Association (ADA), when and where the carbohydrate abnormality began1. the European Association for the Study of Diabetes Although this paper was written 40 years ago1, we still (EASD), the International Federation of Clinical Chem- do not have a genetic marker to establish the diagnosis istry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC), and the Inter- of T2DM, and therefore we have to rely on tests based national Diabetes Federation (IDF), have been modified on fairly arbitrary cut-off points that have been vali- little since then5. According to these criteria, the cur- dated through epidemiologic studies and long-term rent view considers that a fasting plasma glucose (FPG) Corresponding author: *Francisco J. Gómez-Pérez Vasco de Quiroga, 15 Col. Belisario Domínguez, Sector XVI, Del. Tlalpan C.P. 14000, México, D.F., México Received for publication: 12-04-2015 E-mail: [email protected] Accepted for publication: 17-04-2015 76 Francisco J. Gómez-Pérez: INTERPRETATION OF HBA1C, FBS, POSTGLUCOSE LOAD AND MUTIPLE POINTS GLYCEMIA level ≥ 126 mg/dl, considered as diagnostic of T2DM, Table 1. Criteria for the diagnosis of diabetes12 is associated with an increase in retinopathy and, with HbA1c ≥ 6.5%. The test should be performed in a less certainty, with an increased risk of macrovascular laboratory using a method that is NGSP certified and complications. Based on pathophysiologic, clinical, and standardized to the DCCT assay.* epidemiologic studies, it has been shown that two hours or post-glucose load (2HPG) hyperglycemia is a more FPG ≥ 126 mg/dl (7 mmol/l). Fasting is defined as no calorific intake for at least 8 hours.* important predictor of vascular complications includ- or 6,7 ing death due to cardiovascular causes . In a recent Two-hour PG ≥ 200 mg/dl (11.1 mmol/l) during an analysis of the Diabetes Control and Complications OGTT. The test should be performed as described by the 8 WHO, using a glucose load containing the equivalent of © Permanyer Publications 2015 .rehsilbup eht fo noissimrep nettirw roirp eht tuohtiw gniypocotohp ro decudorper eb yam noitacilbup siht fo trap oN trap fo siht noitacilbup yam eb decudorper ro Trial-EDIC studiesgniypocotohp (DCCT/EDIC)tuohtiw , the eht interrelationship roirp nettirw noissimrep fo eht .rehsilbup 75 g anhydrous glucose dissolved in water. among long-term, intermediate-term, and acute mea- or surements of glucose and its daily variability was ex- In a patient with classic symptoms of hyperglycemia or amined by comparing glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), hyperglycemic crisis, a random plasma glucose ≥ 200 mg/dl glycated albumin (GA), and seven-point glucose profile (11.1 mmol/l). concentrations measured longitudinally (mean blood *In the absence of unequivocal hyperglycemia, results should be glucose:mean blood glucose). The results showed that confirmed by repeat testing. HbA1c: glycated hemoglobin; NGSP: National Glycohemoglobin HbA1c and GA were closely associated with each oth- Standardization Program; DCCT: Diabetes Control and Complications er and with the mean blood glucose level derived from Trial; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; PG: plasma glucose; OGTT: oral a seven-point glucose profile. glucose tolerance test; WHO: World Health Organisation. Adapted from: American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in diabetes12. The current diagnostic standards were examined in 2008 by an international expert committee conformed by members of the ADA, EASD, and IDF who focused cross-sectional data14 obtained primarily from the their attention on glucose levels and the presence of National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey long-term complications as the basis for the diagnosis (NHANES), from studies in an Egyptian population, of diabetes9. They found that the previous National Dia- and from data in Pima Indians, showing that the prev- betes Data Group cut-off point of FPG ≥ 140 mg/dl for alence of microvascular complications of diabetes (i.e. diagnosis of T2DM was above the glucose level at which retinopathy) increases in direct proportion to HbA1c retinopathy began, and recommended that this cut-off levels. This relationship is stronger than that of reti- value should be lowered to ≥ 126 mg/dl, assuming nopathy and FPG, as shown in other reports15,16. More- that this would reflect a degree of hyperglycemia sim- over, prospective studies17,18 have revealed that val- ilar to the 2HPG. Diagnosis with either measure would ues of HbA1c between 6.0-6.5% have a significantly result in a similar prevalence of diabetes, given that increased five-year cumulative risk of developing dia- in previous studies no correlation was found, either betes (12-26%). The range of 5.7 to 6.4% was cho- between the value of 140 mg/dl and the 2HPG val- sen because 5.7% is associated with a diabetes risk ue of ≥ 200 mg/dl to diagnose diabetes or between comparable to that of the high-risk participants of the the criteria for impaired fasting glucose and impaired NHANES study18. glucose tolerance10. Moreover, in some studies a lack of correlation has been found between FPG, 2HPG, Some advantages and disadvantages of measuring and HbA1c for diagnosis of T2DM11. HbA1c are important to mention before discussing the role of HbA1c in T2DM diagnosis and as a therapeutic tool. The HbA1c captures chronic hyperglycemia bet- CURRENT CRITERIA ter than fasting or the two-hour oral glucose tolerance FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF TYPE-2 test (OGTT)19 and is more strongly associated with DIABETES MELLITUS (TABLE 1)12 retinopathy than FPG. Besides, fasting is not needed for HbA1c assessment, HbA1c has greater pre-analyt- Although HbA1c is considered the most reliable mean ical stability than plasma glucose, and its biologic vari- for assessing long term glycemia13 (over a two to ability is lower than that for FPG. Contrariwise19, HbA1c three month period of time), evidence for the use of is a poor marker of pathophysiological abnormalities HbA1c for diagnostic purposes is mainly based on and it is weakly correlated with insulin resistance and 77 REV INVES CLIN. 2015;67:76-9 insulin secretion. Standardization of HbA1c measure- In a study of 8,696 subjects from the total population ment may be poor, mainly outside the USA, whereas in the UK, 291 patients (3.3%) with T2DM were de- glucose assays are easier to implement. Abnormal tected using the OGTT, while 502 (5.8%) had HbA1c hemoglobin traits, which interfere with the HbA1c ≥ 6.5%29. Of those diagnosed with T2DM by OGTT, assay, are not uncommon, whereas within-day bio- 93 (1.2%) had HbA1c < 6.5% and therefore would not logical variability of plasma glucose may unveil distur- have been classified as diabetics using the proposed bances of glucose metabolism. For a reliable HbA1c criteria. Using the HbA1c criteria resulted in 304 (3.5%) measurement, subjects must be in a hematologic additional cases of diabetes. Of these 304 additional steady state for the last four months and all con- patients, 172 (56.7%) had impaired glucose tolerance/ © Permanyer Publications 2015 .rehsilbup eht fo noissimrep nettirw roirp eht tuohtiw gniypocotohp ro decudorper eb yam noitacilbup siht fo trap oN trap fo siht noitacilbup yam eb decudorper ro founding and modifyinggniypocotohp factorstuohtiw shouldeht be considered,roirp impairednettirw fasting glycemianoissimrep according fo toeht the 1999 WHO .rehsilbup including that stringent quality assurance tests are in criteria. However, using the HbA1c criteria an increase place and assays are standardized to criteria aligned of 2.2- and 1.4-fold in South Asians and Caucasian to the international reference20-22. Europeans was detected, respectively. In other words, including HbA1c in the diagnostic criteria for T2DM will It is important to note that glycation of hemoglobin almost double the number of subjects diagnosed with occurs continuously through the 120-day lifetime of diabetes, with a higher impact within the South Asian the red cell23 such that red cells with longer lives are the population. Nevertheless, the preferential use of HbA1c most glycated. All but the oldest cells have been ex- missed approximately one third of patients previously posed to glucose levels: the most recent the exposure identified as having T2DM. Other studies have also to glucose, the largest the influence on glycation. It has shown problems of misclassification10,19. been suggested that half of the HbA1c value repre- sents changes in glycemia during the preceding month, another quarter to the previous month, and the re- USING GLYCATED HEMOGLOBIN maining quarter is a reflection of months 3 and 424.
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