Introduction: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) Is The Most Common Endocrine Problem
Few Haemoglobine A1c Point of Care Methods for Better Diabetes Outcome in Yogyakarta Primary Health Care.
The document discusses using point-of-care testing of HbA1c and glucose to improve diabetes diagnosis and management in primary health care settings in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. HbA1c testing provides a reliable long-term indicator of blood glucose levels and can help reduce diabetes complications when glucose is well controlled. The study aims to investigate if new point-of-care glucose technology offers sufficient accuracy for diagnosing diabetes compared to venous blood glucose testing.
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Introduction: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) Is The Most Common Endocrine Problem
Few Haemoglobine A1c Point of Care Methods for Better Diabetes Outcome in Yogyakarta Primary Health Care.
The document discusses using point-of-care testing of HbA1c and glucose to improve diabetes diagnosis and management in primary health care settings in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. HbA1c testing provides a reliable long-term indicator of blood glucose levels and can help reduce diabetes complications when glucose is well controlled. The study aims to investigate if new point-of-care glucose technology offers sufficient accuracy for diagnosing diabetes compared to venous blood glucose testing.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Few Haemoglobine A1c Point of Care Methods for Better Diabetes
Outcome in Yogyakarta Primary Health Care.
Introduction: Diabetes mellitus (DM) is the most common endocrine problem
at present. The diagnosis of this endocrine disorder bases mainly on laboratory investigations. Point-of-care (POC) glucose technology is one of diagnose methode however it is currently considered to be insufficiently accurate for the diagnosis of diabetes so resulting invalid glucose value. Glycated end product is a specific in vivo substance that can be generated in case of poorly controlled DM patients.This is the result from the reaction between proteins in blood (normally hemoglobin or albumin) with excessive glucose in blood.. The two main tests on glycated end products are hemoglobin A1C (HbA1C) and fructosamine. HbA1C gas has a wider range of prediction, upto 3 months, while that of fructosamine is about 1 month. HbA1 is widely accepted as a reliable indicator of long term hyperglycaemia. Objective: Te primary objective of our study was to investigate whether state- of-the-art POC glucose (StatStrip glucose hospital meter, Nova Biomedical, USA) technology could be used as a POC diagnostic tool for type 2 diabetes mellitus and intermediate hyperglycaemia in subjects with a previous history of dysglycaemia, undergoing a 75 g diagnostic oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT). We hypothesized that aninnovative POC-glucose technology might have achieved sufcient analytical accuracy for diagnostic purposes. Method: Subjects. Adult subjects, referred to primary health for the diagnosis of diabetes, were consecutively enrolled in this study. The subjects were either screened by their family physicians and found to have fasting hyperglycaemia (>6.1 mmol/L) or were diagnosed with intermediate hyperglycaemia (impaired fasting glucose (IFG) or impaired glucose tolerance (IGT)), as assessed by oGTT on their previous visits to our Clinic. Pregnant women, referred for the diagnosis of gestational diabetes, and subjects receiving any kind of medication affecting glucose metabolism (e.g., corticosteroids, oral hypoglycaemic agents) were not included in this study.A written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. Laboratory Methods. All laboratory procedures (preanalytical, analytical, and postanalytical) were performed by educated laboratory personnel according to standard operating procedures for the accredited laboratory (ISO 15189 Medical laboratories—particular requirements for qualityand competence). Venous blood was sampled in heparinized tubes (Becton Dickinson, USA) at fasting and 2 hours afer peroralingestion of 75 g glucose dissolved in 250 mL plain water was used as the reference laboratory procedure for venous plasma glucose measurement (RLP). Immediately afer venipuncture, at each time point ofoGTT, capillary blood was sampled by pricking fourth fngerof nondominant hand, and point-of-care (POC) glucose was measured in duplicate, by using two StatStrip glucose meters and two different lots of reagent strips. Classifcation of Glycaemia. Glycaemic status was classifed according to the 2006 WHO diagnostic criteria ford iabetes and intermediate hyperglycaemia. Based on FPG and 2 h PG, subjects were classifed as either having normal glucose tolerance (NGT), impaired fasting glucose (IFG), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), or diabetes mellitus (DM), by using sample type-related classifcation criteria for venous and capillary plasma, respectively Statistical Analysis. Data are presented as mean ± SD. Pearson’s correlation and Passing-Bablok regression analysiswere used for the analytical between- methods comparison. Afer testing for normality, differences between the categoriesof glycaemia were evaluated with ANOVA, followed by Student- Newman-Keuls test for pairwise comparisons, while the differences between POC- and RLP-glucose results wereanalysed with paired samples students’s t- test. Possible influence of hematocrit on between-method bias was assessed with linear regression analysis. assessed by HbA1c, could lead to substantial reductions in the risk of developing the microvascular complication of diabete s such as retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy. Furthermore, long-term follow-up of participants during the observational phase of the UKPDS demonstrated that more effective glycaemic control from the time of diagnosis in people with type 2 diabetes conferred a long-term legacy benefit that persisted even though glycaemic control may deteriorate over time.3 This observation implies that strategies that facilitate early detection of diabetes should result in improved outcomes, with major long-term health and cost benefits The HbA1c test is attractive as it measures chronic glycaemia, rather than instantaneous blood glucose levels. HbA1c has been used as an objective marker of average glycaemic control for many years, has an accepted place in the monitoring of patients with diabetes, and is relied on for significant management decisions, such as initiation of insulin therapy. HbA1c levels were at least as strongly related to the presence of diabetic retinopathy as were blood glucose levels.10 It is also strongly associated with macrovascular outcomes and mortality. HbA1c has recently been endorsed as a diagnostic test for diabetes by the World Health Organization, the International Diabetes Federation and the American Diabetes Association.14
Point-of-care (POC) tests provide analytical information that can be used to
make decisions at patients’ bedside, as opposed to laboratory tests that must be run at a central laboratory. POC testing is a widely used tool to enable immediate determination of glucose levels in hospitalized patients and facilitate rapid treatment decisions in response to fluctuations in glycemia. Accurate POC glucose testing requires attention to various factors before,during, and after performance of tests. These include 1) proper preparationof test sites to avoid preanalytical errors, 2) proper identification of tested patients whose physiological status permits sampled capillary specimens tocorrelate with central venous blood glucose levels to avoid analytical errors, and 3) proper documentation of the fidelity of meter results with the medicalrecord to avoid postanalytical errors. Proper inpatient glycemic management requires timely blood glucose results with careful consideration ofsample size, patient comfort, test time, nursing work flow, cost, and ability to automatically transfer results into theelectronic medical record so they are readily available to clinicians to make treatment changes. Prescription blood glucose monitors for use by HCPs at the bedside are already widely used for this purpose. Regulatory bodies in the United States and Europe aren requiring progressively greater levels of accuracy for these products. Even with accurately performing monitors, it is necessary to follow proper procedures to avoid errors. Preanalyticalerrors resulting from poor sampling or strip storage can cause inaccuracy.
Laboratory Investigation for Diabetes Mellitus: Practical Concerns
FASTING PLASMA GLUCOSE: BASIC BUT
IMPORTANT FPG is the very basic test for DM. FPG is useful for both diagnosis and following up. This is a basic test but very important. The pre-analytical factor seems to strongly affect the FPG results. The patient preparation must be gently controlled. It is a requirement to verify the fasting stage of the patients.
CAPILLARY GLUCOSE DETERMINATION: POINT
OF CARE TESTING [2-4] Capillary glucose determination by glucometer is accepted as a very useful tool in monitoring of DM case. It is accepted as the most widely used point of care testing at present. This can shorten the turnaround time for the laboratory analysis
POSTPRANDIAL GLUCOSE: AN ALTERNATIVE
MEASUREMENT FOR BLOOD GLUCOSE Sometimes, the FPG test is not feasible hence the postprandial glucose is examined. This might be another alternative clue for diagnosis of DM.
GLYCATED END PRODUCT: TOOL FOR
MONITORING FOR DIABETIC COMPLICATION Glycated end product is a specific in vivo substance that can be generated in case of poorly controlled DM patients. This is the result from the reaction between proteins in blood (normally hemoglobin or albumin) with excessive glucose in blood. The nature of energy aberration induction of the reaction results in complications of DM [5]. The two main tests on glycated end products are hemoglobin A1C (HbA1C) and fructosamine. HbA1C gas has a wider range of prediction, upto 3 months,
ORAL GLUCOSE TOLERANCE TEST AND
DIABETES IN PREGNANCY Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) is the main test for diagnosis of DM in pregnancy, which is a specific endocrine disorder in obstetrics. OGTT is generally indicated after positive urine glucose test and glucose challenge test
C-PEPTIDE: A NEW TEST IN DIABETIC MEDICINE
C-peptide is considered as a new test in diabetic medicine. It is mentioned useful in follow-up of the diabetic complication [16]. It is noted for the good diagnostic property for diabetic neuropathy, one of the most common complications of DM
INSULIN TEST: A DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF
HORMONE Insulin is the major hormone in regulation of blood glucose hemeostasis. The abnormality of insulin physiology is mentioned as an important underlying for DM. The measurement of insulin can be done but it is not practically used in routine diabetic clinic.
Validation of Point-of-Care Glucose Testing for
Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes Point-of-care (POC) glucose technology is currently considered to be insufficiently accurate for the diagnosis of diabetes. The objective of this study was to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of an innovative, interference- resistant POC glucose meter (StatStrip glucose hospital meter, Nova Biomedical, USA) in subjects with a previous history of dysglycaemia, undergoing a 75 g diagnostic oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT). Venous and capillary blood sampling for the reference laboratory procedure (RLP) and POC-glucose measurement was carried out at fasting and 2 h oGTT, and categories of glucose tolerance were classified according to 2006 WHO diagnostic criteria for the respective sample type. We found an excellent between-method correlation at fasting (𝑟 = 0.9681, 𝑃 < 0.0001) and 2h oGTT (𝑟 = 0.9768, 𝑃 < 0.0001) and an almost perfect diagnostic agreement(weighted Kappa=0.858).Within a total of 237 study subjects, 137 were diagnosed with diabetes with RLP, and only 6 of them were reclassified as having glucose intolerance with POC. The diagnostic performance of POC- fasting glucose in discriminating between the normal and any category of disturbed glucose tolerance did not differ from the RLP (𝑃 = 0.081). Results of this study indicate that StatStrip POC glucose meter could serve as a reliable tool for the diabetes diagnosis, particularly in primary healthcare facilities with dispersed blood sampling services. Statistical Analysis. Data are presented as mean } SD. Pearson’s correlation and Passing-Bablok regression analysis were used for the analytical between- methods comparison. After testing for normality, differences between the categories of glycaemia were evaluated with ANOVA, followed by Student- Newman-Keuls test for pairwise comparisons, while the differences between POC- and RLP-glucose results were analysed with paired samples students’s t- test. Possible influence of hematocrit on between-method bias was assessed with linear regression analysis. Any 𝑃 value of <0.05 was considered significant. Bland-Altman analysis was used to determine HbA1c was measured with a commercially available immunoturbidimetric procedure (TinaQuant, Cobas Integra-400Plus, Roche Diagnostics, Germany) traceable to the IFCC reference system, with results reported in both International Journal of Endocrinology 3NGSP-conventional (%) and SI (mmol/mol) units. Fasting EDTA-blood samples were obtained for these analyses