COPENHAGEN — Skin autofluorescence is a strong and independent predictor of mortality in patients with well-controlled type 2 diabetes, according to data presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
The study was headed by Dr. Andries Smit, head of the vascular unit of the University Medical Center in Groningen, the Netherlands, and medical director and founder of DiagnOptics, which markets a skin autofluorescence (AF) measuring device called the AGE Reader.
Elevated levels of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) have been shown to predict cardiovascular complications better than blood sugar levels in patients with diabetes. Dr. Smit's group previously showed that AGE levels can be measured in diabetic patients using skin AF (Diabetologia 2004;47:1324–30; Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 2005;1043:290–8).
The current study involved 973 patients with type 2 diabetes (median duration 4.2 years) and well-controlled hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c). Skin AF levels were measured with the AGE Reader at baseline and a median of 3.2 years later. A total of 86 patients died during the study, 44 from cardiovascular disease, said Dr. Helen Lutgers, of the diabetes outpatient clinic, Isala Clinics, Zwolle, the Netherlands, who presented the study at the meeting.
In a Cox regression analysis, smoking, the presence of peripheral vascular disease, and skin AF predicted mortality, with relative risks of 2.17, 2.15, and 1.69, respectively, she reported, but blood sugar, blood pressure, and lipid parameters were not predictive. “This is a superior measurement to HbA1c.”
The AGE Reader measures skin AF noninvasively and can give results in 30 seconds, Dr. Smit said in an interview. “[It] gives incremental prognostic information … in type 2 diabetes at a fraction of the burden and cost of [other] tools.”
The device is approved for marketing in Europe (at a cost of about $25,500). The company is waiting for Food and Drug Administration approval in the United States. U.S. physicians can order the equipment and use it as an investigational device, Dr. Smit said.
The AGE Reader noninvasively detects advanced glycation end products. DiagnOptics BV