D
HbA1c is a physical measure of BG control over 3 months. Estimated (e)A1c is an algorithm based on sensor glucose (not BG) and is not related to HbA1c methods. There were moves about 5 years ago to rename it to Glucose Management Indicator (GMI) to avoid confusion.
From the above reference: "Many patients and clinicians find the eA1C to be a helpful educational tool, but others are often confused or even frustrated if the eA1C and laboratory-measured A1C do not agree. In the US, the Food and Drug Administration determined that the nomenclature of eA1C needed to change. This led the authors to work toward a multipart solution to facilitate the retention of such a metric, which includes renaming the eA1C the glucose management indicator (GMI) and generating a new formula for converting CGM-derived mean glucose to GMI based on recent clinical trials using the most accurate CGM systems available."
So the GMI can give you a handle on how well your control is over different time periods, based on sensor readings. The algorithm includes a factor to compare sensor glucose to real BG so that the units come out the same, but it will never predict HbA1c as we all have different variables.
I saw something similar, only the Libre 2 showed me numbers that were consistently lower than finger prick testing.The Libre seems to run slightly higher than finger prick testing and has done on all sensors used so far.
Or it could be a compression low or it could be insertion trauma or it could just be the 15% accuracy tolerance results in a high difference when your BG is high.As regards differences between Libre and a specific finger prick meter though - it could be either one that is off the mark, or both.
I've noticed that the Libre system gives you both. The A1c figure in the app is based on the last 90 days data (or whatever is available) and uses the old (e)A1c formula, from the days of finger prick testing.HbA1c is a physical measure of BG control over 3 months. Estimated (e)A1c is an algorithm based on sensor glucose (not BG) and is not related to HbA1c methods. There were moves about 5 years ago to rename it to Glucose Management Indicator (GMI) to avoid confusion.
From the above reference: "Many patients and clinicians find the eA1C to be a helpful educational tool, but others are often confused or even frustrated if the eA1C and laboratory-measured A1C do not agree. In the US, the Food and Drug Administration determined that the nomenclature of eA1C needed to change. This led the authors to work toward a multipart solution to facilitate the retention of such a metric, which includes renaming the eA1C the glucose management indicator (GMI) and generating a new formula for converting CGM-derived mean glucose to GMI based on recent clinical trials using the most accurate CGM systems available."
So the GMI can give you a handle on how well your control is over different time periods, based on sensor readings. The algorithm includes a factor to compare sensor glucose to real BG so that the units come out the same, but it will never predict HbA1c as we all have different variables.
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