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Hemoglobin (Hb) A1c With eAG Blood Test

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Test to evaluate average amount of glucose in your blood.

LabCorp

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Test Code:

102525

CPT Code(s):

83036

Also Known As:

Hb A1c With Estimated Average Glucose (eAG); Hb A1c With MPG Estimation; Hb A1c, MPG

Methodology:

Roche Tina Quant

Specimen:

Blood

Preparation:

No special preparation required.

Test Results:

1-2 days. May take longer based on weather, holiday or lab delays.

Walk-In Lab is prohibited from selling LabCorp tests to residents in the following states:NY, NJ, RI, MA, MD

Quest

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Sample Report Compare
Test Code:

16802

CPT Code(s):

83036

Also Known As:

Hb A1c With Estimated Average Glucose (eAG); Hb A1c With MPG Estimation; Hb A1c, MPG

Methodology:

Roche Tina Quant

Specimen:

Blood

Preparation:

No special preparation required.

Test Results:

1-2 days. May take longer based on weather, holiday or lab delays.

Walk-In Lab is prohibited from selling Quest tests to residents in the following states:AZ, NY, NJ, RI


Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) is one of the two primary techniques available for health providers and patients to assess the management plan's effectiveness on glycemic control in diabetes. SMBG is typically carried out in the form of frequent fingerstick capillary glucose testing. Another more recent technology available is continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), carried out through a sensor that measures interstitial glucose concentration, which correlates well with plasma glucose and capillary glucose levels. The second glycemic control technique is a measurement of hemoglobin A1C (Hb A1C). 

Because measurement of Hb A1C is primary, the most accurate glycemic control tool available, it is important to correlate Hb A1C results with ones obtained using SMBG for long-term metabolic control and management of diabetes. Recently, the international multicenter A1C-Derived Average Glucose (ADAG) trial successfully completed and results determined that the correlation between Hb A1C results and eAG (the new term used to combine both CGM and fingerstick capillary glucose testing) is strong enough to justify reporting of both a Hb A1c results and eAG result.

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