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Reference interval for glycated albumin, 1,5-AG/GA, and GA/HbA1c ratios and cut-off values for type 1, type 2, and gestational diabetes: a cross-sectional study

Reference interval for glycated albumin, 1,5-AG/GA, and GA/HbA1c ratios and cut-off values for type 1, type 2, and gestational diabetes: a cross-sectional study
Reference interval for glycated albumin, 1,5-AG/GA, and GA/HbA1c ratios and cut-off values for type 1, type 2, and gestational diabetes: a cross-sectional study
Background/objectives: glycated albumin (GA) serves as a biomarker for short-term glycemic control (2–3 weeks), playing a role in diabetes management. Our goal was to establish reference intervals (RIs) for serum GA, and the ratios of 1,5-anhydroglucitol to GA (AGI) and GA to HbA1c in a Euro-Brazilian pediatric population (10 y, n = 299), adults (43.5 y; n = 290), and pregnant women (26 y, n = 406; 26.5 ± 3.1 gestation weeks).

Methods: receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was employed to determine RIs for type 1 diabetes (T1D) in children (n = 148) and adults (n = 81), type 2 diabetes (T2D, n = 283), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM, n = 177).

Results: both non-pregnant and pregnant women exhibited GA RIs of 10.0–13.3% and 10.6–14.7%, respectively. The AGI ratio varied from 1.2–4.3 in children, 0.9–3.6 in adults, and 0.8–3.1 in pregnant women. Meanwhile, the GA/HbA1c ratio ranged from 1.8–2.6 in children and adults to 2.3–3.6 in pregnant women. GA and AGI ratios accurately differentiated between T1D and T2D, demonstrating high sensitivity (>84%) and specificity (>97%), with AGI showing superior performance (AUC > 0.99). The GA/HbA1c ratio exhibited moderate discriminatory power (AUC > 0.733) but was less effective in distinguishing adult-onset T1D and T2D, suggesting its limited utility in certain groups.

Conclusions: the proposed RIs are consistent with those of other Caucasian populations, affirming their relevance for Euro-Brazilian patients. The GA and AGI ratios emerge as valuable diagnostic tools for T1D and T2D, though their reduced sensitivity in diagnosing GDM warrants further investigation. Clinicians might leverage GA and AGI ratios for more tailored diabetes management, especially when HbA1c results are not optimal.
2227-9059
Al-Lahham, Yusra
187b67d5-156c-4bc9-abd9-915ee01f24b0
Volanski, Waldemar
4a7b81b1-1c29-4899-b739-618d2200a42d
Signorini, Liana
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do Prado, Ademir Luiz
870dcaa1-507e-4269-b5c0-c299b967ea8e
Valdameri, Glaucio
9f6c0a40-999f-4aca-88b4-59548425262a
Moure, Vivian Rotuno
184772d8-3b88-4291-a05e-9151da68cee1
Welter, Marciane
8070d089-04d5-4639-82ef-58d7bdbbb309
Alves, Alexessander C.
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Sari, Marcel Henrique Marcondes
a57bcfa1-3254-4542-8326-3d197eea780d
Rego, Fabiane Gomes de Moraes
28dc6fa5-ce01-4186-8490-d6008996b58a
Picheth, Geraldo
83111b68-458e-49d9-ad5f-6096d4bf50f2
Al-Lahham, Yusra
187b67d5-156c-4bc9-abd9-915ee01f24b0
Volanski, Waldemar
4a7b81b1-1c29-4899-b739-618d2200a42d
Signorini, Liana
9a6f4473-f560-4dfa-a403-17d343ec5c6b
do Prado, Ademir Luiz
870dcaa1-507e-4269-b5c0-c299b967ea8e
Valdameri, Glaucio
9f6c0a40-999f-4aca-88b4-59548425262a
Moure, Vivian Rotuno
184772d8-3b88-4291-a05e-9151da68cee1
Welter, Marciane
8070d089-04d5-4639-82ef-58d7bdbbb309
Alves, Alexessander C.
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Sari, Marcel Henrique Marcondes
a57bcfa1-3254-4542-8326-3d197eea780d
Rego, Fabiane Gomes de Moraes
28dc6fa5-ce01-4186-8490-d6008996b58a
Picheth, Geraldo
83111b68-458e-49d9-ad5f-6096d4bf50f2

Al-Lahham, Yusra, Volanski, Waldemar, Signorini, Liana, do Prado, Ademir Luiz, Valdameri, Glaucio, Moure, Vivian Rotuno, Welter, Marciane, Alves, Alexessander C., Sari, Marcel Henrique Marcondes, Rego, Fabiane Gomes de Moraes and Picheth, Geraldo (2024) Reference interval for glycated albumin, 1,5-AG/GA, and GA/HbA1c ratios and cut-off values for type 1, type 2, and gestational diabetes: a cross-sectional study. Biomedicines, 12 (12), [2651]. (doi:10.3390/biomedicines12122651).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background/objectives: glycated albumin (GA) serves as a biomarker for short-term glycemic control (2–3 weeks), playing a role in diabetes management. Our goal was to establish reference intervals (RIs) for serum GA, and the ratios of 1,5-anhydroglucitol to GA (AGI) and GA to HbA1c in a Euro-Brazilian pediatric population (10 y, n = 299), adults (43.5 y; n = 290), and pregnant women (26 y, n = 406; 26.5 ± 3.1 gestation weeks).

Methods: receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was employed to determine RIs for type 1 diabetes (T1D) in children (n = 148) and adults (n = 81), type 2 diabetes (T2D, n = 283), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM, n = 177).

Results: both non-pregnant and pregnant women exhibited GA RIs of 10.0–13.3% and 10.6–14.7%, respectively. The AGI ratio varied from 1.2–4.3 in children, 0.9–3.6 in adults, and 0.8–3.1 in pregnant women. Meanwhile, the GA/HbA1c ratio ranged from 1.8–2.6 in children and adults to 2.3–3.6 in pregnant women. GA and AGI ratios accurately differentiated between T1D and T2D, demonstrating high sensitivity (>84%) and specificity (>97%), with AGI showing superior performance (AUC > 0.99). The GA/HbA1c ratio exhibited moderate discriminatory power (AUC > 0.733) but was less effective in distinguishing adult-onset T1D and T2D, suggesting its limited utility in certain groups.

Conclusions: the proposed RIs are consistent with those of other Caucasian populations, affirming their relevance for Euro-Brazilian patients. The GA and AGI ratios emerge as valuable diagnostic tools for T1D and T2D, though their reduced sensitivity in diagnosing GDM warrants further investigation. Clinicians might leverage GA and AGI ratios for more tailored diabetes management, especially when HbA1c results are not optimal.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2024
Published date: 21 November 2024
Additional Information: Correction Notice: a correction to this research output can be found at: https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13071621

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509402
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509402
ISSN: 2227-9059
PURE UUID: 867e05a2-b304-4600-82e3-7c847c0d05ce
ORCID for Alexessander C. Alves: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8519-7356

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2026 17:38
Last modified: 21 Feb 2026 03:20

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Contributors

Author: Yusra Al-Lahham
Author: Waldemar Volanski
Author: Liana Signorini
Author: Ademir Luiz do Prado
Author: Glaucio Valdameri
Author: Vivian Rotuno Moure
Author: Marciane Welter
Author: Alexessander C. Alves ORCID iD
Author: Marcel Henrique Marcondes Sari
Author: Fabiane Gomes de Moraes Rego
Author: Geraldo Picheth

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