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Diabetes Care 30:135-137, 2007
DOI: 10.2337/dc06-0972
© 2007 by the American Diabetes Association
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Clinical Care/Education/Nutrition
Brief Report

Relative Inaccuracy of the A1cNow in Children With Type 1 Diabetes

Larry Fox, MD1, Mariya Dontchev, MPH2, Katrina Ruedy, MSPH2, Roy Beck, MD, PHD2, Craig Kollman, PHD2, Laurel Messer, RN3, Julie Coffey, MSN4, Darrell Wilson, MD5, Elizabeth Doyle, MSN6, William Tamborlane, MD6, Michael Steffes, MD, PHD7 and The DirecNet Study Group

1 Nemours Children’s Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida
2 Jaeb Center for Health Research, Tampa, Florida
3 Barbara Davis Center, Denver, Colorado
4 University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa
5 Stanford University, Stanford, California
6 Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
7 University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Larry Fox, MD c/o DirecNet Coordinating Center, Jaeb Center for Health Research, 15310 Amberly Dr., Suite 350, Tampa, FL 33647. E-mail: direcnet{at}jaeb.org

Abbreviations: DCCT, Diabetes Control and Complications Trial • DirecNet, Diabetes Research in Children Network • HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography • NGSP, National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 INTRODUCTION
 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--
 RESULTS--
 CONCLUSIONS--
 References
 
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) confirmed the importance of tight glucose control in limiting the development of microvascular complications and established a standard for measuring A1C levels using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) (1). Several studies demonstrated the benefit of rapid A1C testing in the clinic while face-to-face with the patient/family (24). The DCA2000 Analyzer (Bayer, Tarrytown, NY) uses an immunoassay method certified by the National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP) (5). It is frequently used to provide a rapid (6 min) A1C result, enhancing the ability to optimize therapy in a timely fashion. We recently reported that the DCA2000 was highly correlated with an HPLC reference (the DCCT standard) (r = 0.94, P < 0.001), although there was a slight bias with DCA2000 values being, on average, 0.2% higher than laboratory values (6).

The A1cNow (Metrika, Sunnyvale, CA) was developed as a single-use, disposable test for measuring A1C at home. It is small, about the size of a pager, requires one drop of blood, and uses an immunoassay. Results are displayed in ~8 min. However, there has been only one published study (7) to date assessing the accuracy of the A1cNow, and that study did not compare A1cNow values to the DCA2000. Furthermore, older generation A1cNow devices that were not NGSP certified were used in that study. We therefore designed the current study to compare the accuracy of updated, NGSP-certified A1cNow devices and corresponding DCA2000 levels with the DCCT/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC) Study laboratory reference values when used at home and during a clinic visit in children with type 1 diabetes.


    RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—
 TOP
 INTRODUCTION
 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--
 RESULTS--
 CONCLUSIONS--
 References
 
The study was conducted at the five Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) clinical centers in 32 children with type 1 diabetes. Institutional review board approval and informed consent were obtained for the study. A1C was measured four times using the A1cNow, twice by the subject or parent at home and twice by site staff at a DirecNet study visit the same or the following day. Commercially available A1cNow monitors were used. Subjects were given the instructions provided by the manufacturer, with no additional instructions provided by clinical center staff. At the clinic visit, A1C was measured using the DCA2000, and a fingerstick blood sample was obtained, frozen at –70°C, and shipped to the DCCT/DirecNet Central Laboratory where measurements were performed using cation-exchange HPLC methodology (Tosoh) (1). At the same time that each A1cNow test was administered at home and in the clinic, the subjects’ blood glucose concentration (reported in plasma equivalents) was measured using a Freestyle meter (Abbott Diabetes Care, Alameda, CA).

Least squares repeated-measures regression was used to compare the accuracy (absolute value of the difference between the device and laboratory A1C value) of the A1cNow versus DCA2000. Additional repeated-measures regressions were run to assess the impact of A1C (laboratory value) and glucose concentrations on A1cNow accuracy.


    RESULTS—
 TOP
 INTRODUCTION
 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--
 RESULTS--
 CONCLUSIONS--
 References
 
The average age was 15 years; 41% were female and 94% Caucasian. The mean ± SD Central Laboratory A1C was 7.5 ± 0.9%, with 28% of values <7.0%, 41% between 7.0 and 7.9%, and 31% ≥8.0%. The DCA2000 was considerably more accurate than the A1cNow (P < 0.001). Thirty-two percent of the A1cNow values differed from the reference value by >0.5% compared with only 3% of the DCA2000 values (Table 1). There were no clinically significant differences in accuracy between subject/parent and staff measurements. Accuracy of the A1cNow did not vary with A1C level (P = 0.22); the A1cNow was within 0.5% in 74% of reference values ≥8.0% and 67% of reference values <8.0%. Glucose concentration at the time of the A1cNow also did not impact accuracy (P = 0.18). For the 25 cases in which two simultaneous A1cNow measurements were made at home and the 29 cases at the clinic, 32 and 34%, respectively, of the two measurements differed >0.5%. Scatterplots of the A1cNow and DCA2000 against the reference with the regression lines (Figure 1) also demonstrate a much tighter relationship with the DCA2000.


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Table 1— A1cNow and DCA2000 accuracy for 32 subjects

 

Figure 1
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Figure 1— Scatterplots of A1cNow (A) and DCA2000 (B) versus laboratory reference. The regression line for A1cNow (A) accounts for repeated measurements per subject.

 

    CONCLUSIONS—
 TOP
 INTRODUCTION
 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--
 RESULTS--
 CONCLUSIONS--
 References
 
The A1cNow is not as accurate as the DCA2000. A substantial proportion of measurements differ from a reference value >0.5%, whereas only 3% of DCA2000 values differed from the reference value >0.5%, which is consistent with our previous report (6).

Furthermore, and probably more importantly, there were marked differences in values when two simultaneous measurements were made, either at home by the parents or in the clinic setting by experienced clinical center staff. Thus, variability among simultaneous values does not appear to reflect errors in performing the tests by untrained parents and patients but instead reflects problems inherent to the A1cNow, even though the kits we used were NGSP certified. Our A1cNow results were consistent with those published by Kennedy and Herman (7). Using data from 6,231 subjects, they reported that 32% of values differed >0.75% from the laboratory reference (Bio-Rad Variant ion exchange) and that 20% were >1.0% discrepant. At present, the routine use of the A1cNow in children with type 1 diabetes cannot be recommended.


    Acknowledgments
 
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Grants HD041919, HD041915, HD041890, HD041918, HD041908, and HD041906 and General Clinical Research Center Grants RR00069, RR00059, RR06022, and RR00070.


    Footnotes
 
A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.

The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Received for publication May 11, 2006. Accepted for publication September 24, 2006.


    References
 TOP
 INTRODUCTION
 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--
 RESULTS--
 CONCLUSIONS--
 References
 

  1. Steffes M, Cleary P, Goldstein D, Little R, Wiedmeyer H-M, Rohlfing C, England J, Bucksa J, Nowicki M, the DERG Study: Hemoglobin A1c measurements over nearly two decades: sustaining comparable values throughout Diabetes Control, Complications Trial and Epidemiology of Interventions and Complications Study. Clin Chem 51:753–758, 2005[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Cagliero E, Levina EV, Nathan DM: Immediate feedback of HbA1c levels improves glycemic control in type 1 and insulin-treated type 2 diabetic patients. Diabetes Care 22:1785–1789, 1999[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  3. Thaler LM, Ziemer DC, Gallina DL, Cook CB, Dunbar VG, Phillips LS, El-Kebbi IM: Diabetes in urban African-Americans. XVII. Availability of rapid HbA1c measurements enhances clinical decision making. Diabetes Care 22:1415–1421, 1999[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  4. Miller CD, Barnes CS, Phillips LS, Ziemer DC, Gallina DL, Cook CB, Maryman SD, El-Kebbi IM: Rapid A1C availability improves clinical decision making in an urban primary care clinic. Diabetes Care 26:1158–1163, 2003[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Little RR: Glycated hemoglobin standardization: National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP) perspective. Clin Chem Lab Med 41:1191–1198, 2003[Medline]
  6. Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group: Comparison of fingerstick hemoglobin A1c levels assayed by DCA 2000 with the DCCT/EDIC central laboratory assay: results of a Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study. Pediatr Diabetes 6:13–16, 2005[Medline]
  7. Kennedy L, Herman WH: Glycated hemoglobin assessment in clinical practice: comparison of the A1cNow Point-of-Care Device with Central Laboratory Testing (GOAL A1C Study). Diabetes Technol Ther 7:907–912, 2005[Medline]

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This Article
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