Abstract
For quantification of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), we compared an automated system (Pharmacia Fast Protein Liquid Chromatography), which separates and determines HbA1c, with a commercial disposable-minicolumn kit (Boehringer-Mannheim), which separates total HbA1. We studied 41 diabetic women and 79 apparently normal women on their first postparturition day. The automated method was more precise (within-run CV 0.98-4.16%) than the kit method (within-run CV 3.67-7.77%). Results by the two methods correlated well for both control (p less than 0.001) and diabetic (p less than 0.05) groups. Values for HbA1c correlated significantly with fasting blood-glucose concentrations in controls and diabetics (intraclass correlation coefficient rI = 0.822 and 0.851, respectively, p less than 0.001) as well as with 1- and 2-h values for glucose after a 75-g glucose load in the control group (rI = 0.649 and 0.846, respectively, p less than 0.001). For HbA1 no such significant correlation was found except with values for fasting blood glucose in diabetics (rI = 0.745, p less than 0.001). Evaluation of HbA1c was a more sensitive index of glycemic status. The automated system is convenient, reliable, and easily operated.