Data from the epidemiologic survey in Sudbury, Massachusetts, demonstrate that the prevalence of new cases of diabetes, based on the USPHS criteria for the standard 3-h oral glucose tolerance test as originally published, was 0.7%. If a fasting blood sugar ≥ to 110 mg/dl had been required for those USPH diagnoses, the prevalence would have fallen to 0.28%. Further, if a peak serum insulin level of ≤ 60 μU/ml had been required, the original prevalence rate would have dropped to 0.02%. Data from a prospeh criteria for diabetes indicate by life table analyses that 41% show further deterioration of carbohydrate control over the first 13 yr of the study when the fasting blood sugar was < 110 mg/dl in the initial diagnostic test and 82% when the fasting blood sugar was ≥ to 110 mg/dl. The relationship of fasting blood glucose to later decompensation proved to be a continuous one without evidence of a threshold effect. The implications of both of these studies for diagnostic criteria, particularly recent proposals, is discussed.
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Proceedings of the Kroc Foundation International Conference on Epidemiology of Diabetes and its Macrovascular Complications|
March 01 1979
Prevalence and Course of Diabetes Modified by Fasting Blood Glucose Levels: Implications for Diagnostic Criteria
John B O'Sullivan
John B O'Sullivan
Department of Medicine, Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology Section, Boston University Medical School
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Citation
John B O'Sullivan; Prevalence and Course of Diabetes Modified by Fasting Blood Glucose Levels: Implications for Diagnostic Criteria. Diabetes Care 1 March 1979; 2 (2): 85–90. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.2.2.85
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