Adding a
test normally used for diabetes monitoring to employee wellness exams could
identify people who don't have the disease but are at high risk of developing
it, a recent study suggests.
Researchers
examined data from two different types of blood sugar test for more than 34,000
participants in a U.S. employee wellness program who didn't have diabetes. At
the start of the study, they all also had fasting blood sugar in a healthy
range.
Researchers
also looked at results of blood tests showing so-called hemoglobin A1c levels,
which reflect average blood sugar levels over about three months. Readings
above 6.5 percent A1c signal diabetes, and none of the participants had
readings this high.
But
people who started the study with readings closest to a diabetes diagnosis –
above 5.9 percent A1c but less than 6.5 percent - were more than eight times more
likely to develop diabetes over about four years of follow-up than participants
who had readings under 5.7 percent to begin with.
People
who started out with A1c readings from 5.7 percent to 5.9 percent had about
twice the risk of developing diabetes as people with lower results, researchers
report in Diabetes Care.
"Identifying
diabetes risk is really important because we know that type 2 diabetes can be
prevented or delayed with effective intervention, including exercise and diet
changes," said Laura Rosella of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at
the University of Toronto.
"Employers
would be interested in knowing who is at risk for diabetes so that they could
potentially play a role in facilitating or offering preventive strategies that
would prevent full blown diabetes," Rosella said by email. "This
keeps their employees healthy and prevents downstream health and disability
care costs."
Globally,
about one in 10 adults has diabetes, according to the World Health
Organization. Most have type 2 diabetes, which is associated with obesity and
aging and occurs when the body can't make or process enough of the hormone
insulin.
Medications
as well as lifestyle changes such as improved diet and exercise habits can help
manage diabetes and keep symptoms in check. When diabetes isn't well managed,
however, dangerously high blood sugar can eventually lead to blindness,
amputations, kidney failure, heart disease and stroke.
"One
of the key issues with diabetes is that a person may make the transition from
not having diabetes to having diabetes and not otherwise know it," said
Dr. Robert Cohen of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and the
Cincinnati VA Medical Center.
That
transition depends on an interaction between inherited factors and
environmental factors and is still the subject of intense study, Cohen, who
wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
"One
person can do a great job on all the environmental factors (lifestyle, diet,
exercise, avoiding smoking) and still develop diabetes while another can do
considerably less well yet not go on to diabetes - there is a lot of difference
between people in how those factors interact," Cohen added.
"Hence,
we need a screening procedure to pick up the problem early," Cohen said.
During
the study, about 13 percent of the people with the highest A1c readings went on
to develop diabetes, versus less than 1 percent of people with lower readings.
One
limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data on whether any employee
wellness programs were implemented to prevent diabetes in the people who
appeared most at risk, and how effective they might have been. The study
authors couldn't be reached for comment.
"The
obvious next step is an intervention study to test whether A1c screening in
combination with employee wellness programs is a more cost-effective method of
preventing diabetes than such programs alone," said Mika Kivimaki, a researcher
at University College London in the UK, who wasn't involved in the study.
"Many
employees with diabetes are not diagnosed and do not get treatment,"
Kivimaki, who wasn't involved in the study, said by email. "A1c screening
could help to address this important problem."
Source:
Reuters
Read
more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/health/blood-test-may-predict-who-is-most-at-risk-for-diabetes-10270906
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