Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1967662 Clinica Chimica Acta 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundInterpretation of serial measurements of % hemoglobin A1c includes an assessment of differences from preceding values (DHbA1c). We examined predicted effects of different assay precisions on an observed population distribution for DHbA1c.MethodsPrimary data were 5260 DHbA1c values from sequential HbA1c measurement pairs obtained within 1 calendar year. Each DHbA1c was replaced by a distribution obtained from sampling each component HbA1c value according to a normal distribution characterized by a fixed coefficient of variation (CV) of either 1%, 3% or 5% (forming data sets A, B and C, respectively). Data sets B and C, with inferior precision, were compared with the reference data set A (highest precision).ResultsUsing DHbA1c bin widths of 0.5% HbA1c, differences in assay precision caused significant redistribution of numbers within bins. For instance, for CV = 5%, there was a 7.2% decrease in the number of results within the DHbA1c bin = (− 0.5 to ≤ 0.0)% compared with the number for CV = 1%, and a 6.4% increase in numbers of results for DHbA1c > 0.5.ConclusionDifferent HbA1c assay CVs can significantly affect the fraction of patients within different clinical categorizations for DHbA1c and consequently may differently influence patient care recommendations.

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