Anyone know how precise HbA1c results are? I.e. what are the error margins. Do GPs have this information on a particular test? For example, my last result was 6.5%, does my GP know this to be 6.5% +/- 0.2% or something similar?
I think that all UK labs are part of the NGSP Process for standardisation. The paper shows how it works, no idea how it works at the bottom of the chain .We can conclude that, at least whenHbA1c is measured
in an accredited laboratory, physicians can be reasonably
(95%) certain that a difference of 0.5% Hb A1c or
greater between successive patient samples represents a
statistically significant change in glycemic control. If the
laboratory is using a method that demonstrates a within laboratory
CV 2%, as is still the case with some assay
methods, there is less confidence that a difference of 0.5%
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/31/8/1473.fullThe results of the A1c-Derived Average Glucose (ADAG) study support the notion of a close relationship between A1C levels and AG for both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. .
Third, there is uncertainty associated with the eAG value itself, acknowledged by the authors but not evident in the formula promulgated on the ADA Web site. ( I think that is the same as the one this site now)That uncertainty is such that two patients with the same true mean glucose level of 170 mg/dl could have an A1C value anywhere from 6.5% (which is as low as the A1C values of the intervention groups of the VA and ACCORD [Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes] studies) to 9.0% (which was adversely high in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial)
SamJB said:Anyone know how precise HbA1c results are? I.e. what are the error margins. Do GPs have this information on a particular test? For example, my last result was 6.5%, does my GP know this to be 6.5% +/- 0.2% or something similar?