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A1C for screening and diagnosis of type 2 diabetes in routine clinical practice

Authors :
Kerin O'Dea
Karen Z. Walker
Zhong X. Lu
Ken Sikaris
Jonathan E. Shaw
Lu, Zhong X
Walker, K
O'Dea, Kerin
Sikaris, Ken A
Shaw, Jonathan
Source :
Diabetes Care
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To evaluate A1C for screening and diagnosis of undiagnosed type 2 diabetes defined by oral glucose tolerance testing in clinical and general populations. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS A1C cut offs (≤5.5% to rule out diabetes; ≥7.0% to rule in diabetes) were derived from a clinical group (Melbourne Pathology [MP] group: n = 2,494; undiagnosed diabetes 34.6%) and then evaluated in a population-based sample (AusDiab group: n = 6,015; undiagnosed diabetes 4.6%). RESULTS For diabetes in the MP and AusDiab groups, A1C at 5.5% gave sensitivities of 98.7 and 83.5%, while A1C at 7.0% gave specificities of 98.2 and 100%, respectively. Many (61.9–69.3%) with impaired A1C (5.6–6.9%) in both populations had abnormal glucose status. CONCLUSIONS A1C ≤5.5% and ≥7.0% predicts absence or presence of type 2 diabetes, respectively, while at A1C 6.5–6.9% diabetes is highly probable in clinical and population settings. A high proportion of people with impaired A1C have abnormal glucose status requiring follow-up.

Details

ISSN :
19355548
Volume :
33
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0faa68d785a503c45930a933a0677c7c