use of HbA1c for new diagnosis of diabetes in those with hyperglycaemia on admission to or attendance at hospital urgently requires research

IF 0.4 Q4 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
S. Manley, Andreas Karwath, John A. Williams, P. Nightingale, J. Webber, R. Raghavan, Alison Barratt, C. Webster, R. Round, I. Stratton, G. Gkoutos, G. Roberts, Samiul Mostafa, Sandip Ghosh
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Abstract

The prevalence of diabetes in Birmingham is 11% but it is 22% in hospital inpatients. Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham (QEHB) serves a multi-ethnic population with 6% Afro-Caribbean, 19% South Asian and 70% White European. A clinical audit of 18,965 emergency admissions to QEHB showed that 5% were undiagnosed but had admission glucose in the ‘diabetes’ range and 16% were in the ‘at risk’ range. The proportion of Afro-Caribbeans (7%) and South Asians (8%) in the ‘diabetes’ range was higher than White Europeans (5%). Given the magnitude of the problem, this paper explores the issues concerning the use of reflex HbA1c testing in the UK for diagnosis of diabetes in hospital admissions. HbA1c testing is suitable for most patients but conditions affecting red blood cell turnover invalidate the results in a small number of people. However, there are pertinent questions relating to the introduction of such testing in the NHS on a routine basis. Literature searches on a topical question ‘Is hyperglycaemia identified during emergency admission/attendance acted upon?’, were performed from 2016 to 2021 and 2016 to 2022. They identified 21 different, relevant, research papers - 5 from Australia, 9 from Europe including 4 from the UK, 5 from America and 1 each from Canada and Africa. These papers revealed an absence of established procedures for the management and follow-up of routinely detected hyperglycaemia using HbA1c when no previous diabetes diagnosis was recorded. Further work is required to determine the role of reflex HbA1c testing for diagnosis of diabetes in admissions with hyperglycaemia, and the cost-effectiveness and role of point-of-care HbA1c testing.
在入院或住院时高血糖患者中使用HbA1c诊断糖尿病迫切需要研究
伯明翰的糖尿病患病率为11%,但在住院患者中为22%。伯明翰伊丽莎白女王医院(QEHB)为多民族人群提供服务,其中6%为非裔加勒比人,19%为南亚人,70%为欧洲白人。对18965名QEHB急诊入院患者的临床审计显示,5%未确诊,但入院血糖在“糖尿病”范围内,16%在“高危”范围内。非洲裔加勒比人(7%)和南亚人(8%)在“糖尿病”范围内的比例高于欧洲白人(5%)。鉴于这个问题的严重性,本文探讨了在英国住院时使用HbA1c检测来诊断糖尿病的问题。HbA1c检测适用于大多数患者,但影响红细胞周转的情况使少数人的结果无效。然而,在英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)中引入这种常规检测也存在相关问题。关于“是否在急诊入院/就诊期间发现了高血糖?”这一主题问题的文献检索,分别于2016年至2021年和2016年至2022年进行。他们发现了21篇不同的相关研究论文——5篇来自澳大利亚,9篇来自欧洲,其中4篇来自英国,5篇来自美国,加拿大和非洲各1篇。这些论文揭示了在以前没有糖尿病诊断记录的情况下,缺乏使用HbA1c对常规检测的高血糖进行管理和随访的既定程序。需要进一步的工作来确定糖化血红蛋白检测在诊断糖尿病和高血糖入院中的作用,以及护理点糖化血红蛋白检测的成本效益和作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Diabetes
British Journal of Diabetes ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM-
自引率
16.70%
发文量
15
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