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Effect of Red Blood Cell Survival on a Commonly Used Diabetes Lab Test-HbA1c

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Prediabetes
Diabetes Mellitus
Impaired Fasting Glucose

Treatments

Biological: Re-infusion of biotin labeled cells
Behavioral: Diabetes education/diabetes medication adjustment
Biological: re-infusion of biotin labeled cells

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT01204216
09100601 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
ENDA-006-09S

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prevention of complications in veterans with diabetes depends heavily on assessment of blood glucose and HbA1c. The HbA1c is a blood test that measures the exposure of hemoglobin (Hb) to a person's average blood glucose over the lifespan of a red blood cell (RBC). The test is heavily relied upon as a measure of blood glucose control. It is normally assumed that all people (those with and without diabetes) have a narrow range of red blood cell survival. It has been recently shown that this is not a valid assumption.

A more precise test of red blood cell survival, using a biotin label method, demonstrated a substantial difference of red blood cell survival among otherwise normal people. There is sufficient difference in red blood cell survival to alter the estimate of glycemic control from the HbA1c test by as much as 30 per cent. This introduces concern that HbA1c values do not mean the same thing in a significant number of people.

Although the evidence is clear that there is variation in RBC survival among people, attributing this variation to differences between individuals depends on answering several simple questions which surprisingly remain unanswered: whether RBC survival is stable over time within an individual and whether blood glucose control affects its stability. Therefore, the goal of the proposed studies is to define these characteristics.

Full description

The first Specific Aim tests the hypothesis that mean RBC age is stable in subjects without diabetes and in subjects with diabetes at stable glycemic control. The second Specific Aim tests the hypothesis that mean RBC age will not change in subjects with diabetes studied initially in poor glycemic control, and again after being treated to stable, improved glycemic control for >8 months. To accomplish the two aims, RBC survival and mean blood glucose will be determined at two times separated by at least eight months in 10 subjects without diabetes, 10 subjects with diabetes and stable glycemic control, and up to 15 subjects with diabetes in initial poor glycemic control in order to re-study 10 subjects subsequently in improved glycemic control. The RBC survival will be measured using the same novel biotin RBC label in conjunction with mean glucose determination by continuous glucose monitoring. Mean blood glucose will be assessed using blood glucose testing meter , continuous glucose monitoring equipment, HbA1c, fructosamine and glycated albumin determinations HbA1c is the most highly valued clinical test for long term monitoring of glycemic control and the prediction of diabetes complications risk is relied upon for hundreds of thousands of clinical decisions made every year in veterans with diabetes. The proposed studies, by further defining RBC survival stability necessary to develop a new approach to HbA1c interpretation, therefore has the potential to dramatically support the Department of Veterans Affairs in its mission to reduce the burden of diabetes and its complications

Enrollment

3 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Subjects will be between ages 18 and 85 for Aim 1 and between 18 and 80 years for Aim 2 and non-pregnant
  • Subjects with both types 1 and 2 diabetes
  • Subjects without diabetes (as determined by an OGTT test at screening)
  • veterans receiving care at VAMC will be given preference but open to both veterans and non-veterans.

Exclusion criteria

  • known hemoglobinopathy or RBC disorder
  • positive pregnancy test (in women of child-bearing potential or are breast feeding or planning pregnancy during the course of the study;
  • baseline serum creatinine >1.5 mg/dl
  • CBC outside the normal range
  • history of GI blood loss or coagulopathy
  • urine microalbumin >100 mcg/mg creatinine (spot collection);
  • transaminases >3 X the upper limit of normal
  • presence of serum antibodies to biotinylated proteins (which could interfere with the biotin RBC labeling protocol)
  • greater than or equal to NYHA stage 3 heart failure;
  • active infection;
  • known rheumatologic disease
  • uncontrolled hypo-or hyperthyroidism or an underlying illness known to be associated with either body wasting or changes in serum proteins
  • plans to move out of the area within the time frame of the Aim for which they are recruited
  • unwillingness to perform self monitoring of blood glucose

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

3 participants in 2 patient groups

Aim 1
Active Comparator group
Description:
Subjects in this arm will be 10 people without diabetes as well as 10 people with diabetes and stable glycemic control. Subjects will participate in experiments involving re-infusion of biotin-labeled cells in which a small volume (\< 10 ml) of autologous, biotinylated erythrocytes will be re-infused to determine cell lifespan and in vivo HbA1c formation rate.
Treatment:
Biological: re-infusion of biotin labeled cells
Aim 2
Active Comparator group
Description:
For Aim 2, 10 additional subjects with diabetes in poor glycemic control will be studied initially and then again in improved glycemic control after at least 8 months (with up to 5 additional subjects entered as needed to ensure 10 completed paired studies) to assess the potential role of MRBC variation in the discordances seen between HbA1c and blood glucose testing. Subjects will participate in experiments involving re-infusion of biotin-labeled cells in which a small volume (\< 10 ml) of autologous, biotinylated erythrocytes will be re-infused to determine cell lifespan and in vivo HbA1c formation rate.
Treatment:
Biological: Re-infusion of biotin labeled cells
Behavioral: Diabetes education/diabetes medication adjustment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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