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A method for assessing quality of control from glucose profiles

A method for assessing quality of control from glucose profiles
A method for assessing quality of control from glucose profiles

Aim: as the practice of multiple assessments of glucose concentration throughout the day increases for people with diabetes, there is a need for an assessment of glycaemic control weighted for the clinical risks of both hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia. 

Methods: we have developed a methodology to report the degree of risk which a glycaemic profile represents. Fifty diabetes professionals assigned risk values to a range of 40 blood glucose concentrations. Their responses were summarised and a generic function of glycaemic risk was derived. This function was applied to patient glucose profiles to generate an integrated risk score termed the Glycaemic Risk Assessment Diabetes Equation (GRADE). The GRADE score was then reported by use of the mean value and the relative percent contribution to the weighted risk score from the hypoglycaemic, euglycaemic, hyperglycaemic range, respectively, e.g. GRADE (hypoglycaemia%, euglycaemia%, hyperglycaemia%). 

Results: the GRADE scores of indicative glucose profiles were as follows: continuous glucose monitoring profile non-diabetic subjects GRADE = 1.1, Type 1 diabetes continuous glucose monitoring GRADE = 8.09 (20%, 8%, 72%), Type 2 diabetes home blood glucose monitoring GRADE = 9.97 (2%, 7%, 91%). 

Conclusions: the GRADE score of a glucose profile summarises the degree of risk associated with a glucose profile. Values < 5 correspond to euglycaemia. The GRADE score is simple to generate from any blood glucose profile and can be used as an adjunct to HbA1c to report the degree of risk associated with glycaemic variability.

CGMS, Glucose assessment, Glucose controlglycaemic index, Hyperglycaemia, Hypoglycaemia, M-value, Risk
0742-3071
753-758
Hill, N.R.
8309df11-9d90-4ada-96ea-e5805376e879
Hindmarsh, P.C.
132a86fd-5d29-4dc2-a01b-ffa1a5665746
Stevens, R.J.
12ebee9c-5936-4035-ad71-8f7f64ddcc59
Stratton, I.M.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Levy, J.C.
d9dbe8ca-9ef9-4b2c-b3c1-64ccec04106f
Matthews, D.R.
5219da29-8f60-4612-bb74-7b0e8589ccc4
Hill, N.R.
8309df11-9d90-4ada-96ea-e5805376e879
Hindmarsh, P.C.
132a86fd-5d29-4dc2-a01b-ffa1a5665746
Stevens, R.J.
12ebee9c-5936-4035-ad71-8f7f64ddcc59
Stratton, I.M.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Levy, J.C.
d9dbe8ca-9ef9-4b2c-b3c1-64ccec04106f
Matthews, D.R.
5219da29-8f60-4612-bb74-7b0e8589ccc4

Hill, N.R., Hindmarsh, P.C., Stevens, R.J., Stratton, I.M., Levy, J.C. and Matthews, D.R. (2007) A method for assessing quality of control from glucose profiles. Diabetic Medicine, 24 (7), 753-758. (doi:10.1111/j.1464-5491.2007.02119.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: as the practice of multiple assessments of glucose concentration throughout the day increases for people with diabetes, there is a need for an assessment of glycaemic control weighted for the clinical risks of both hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia. 

Methods: we have developed a methodology to report the degree of risk which a glycaemic profile represents. Fifty diabetes professionals assigned risk values to a range of 40 blood glucose concentrations. Their responses were summarised and a generic function of glycaemic risk was derived. This function was applied to patient glucose profiles to generate an integrated risk score termed the Glycaemic Risk Assessment Diabetes Equation (GRADE). The GRADE score was then reported by use of the mean value and the relative percent contribution to the weighted risk score from the hypoglycaemic, euglycaemic, hyperglycaemic range, respectively, e.g. GRADE (hypoglycaemia%, euglycaemia%, hyperglycaemia%). 

Results: the GRADE scores of indicative glucose profiles were as follows: continuous glucose monitoring profile non-diabetic subjects GRADE = 1.1, Type 1 diabetes continuous glucose monitoring GRADE = 8.09 (20%, 8%, 72%), Type 2 diabetes home blood glucose monitoring GRADE = 9.97 (2%, 7%, 91%). 

Conclusions: the GRADE score of a glucose profile summarises the degree of risk associated with a glucose profile. Values < 5 correspond to euglycaemia. The GRADE score is simple to generate from any blood glucose profile and can be used as an adjunct to HbA1c to report the degree of risk associated with glycaemic variability.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 10 November 2006
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 April 2007
Published date: 27 April 2007
Keywords: CGMS, Glucose assessment, Glucose controlglycaemic index, Hyperglycaemia, Hypoglycaemia, M-value, Risk

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487049
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487049
ISSN: 0742-3071
PURE UUID: 7bf72337-2ddf-450c-85a8-09cf37a49586
ORCID for I.M. Stratton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1172-7865

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Date deposited: 12 Feb 2024 17:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: N.R. Hill
Author: P.C. Hindmarsh
Author: R.J. Stevens
Author: I.M. Stratton ORCID iD
Author: J.C. Levy
Author: D.R. Matthews

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