A prospective comparison of the AUSDRISK and HbA1c for persons with spinal cord injury

Main Article Content

Wendy Jannings RN, SCM, Cert Spinal injuries, Cert Adult Ed
Margaret Fry, PhD MED BSc NP
Robyn Gallagher, PhD, MN, BN, RN

Keywords

AUSDRISK, type 2 diabetes, spinal cord injury, diabetes screening tools, preventative health

Abstract

Objective: The primary object of this study was to determine the validity of the Australian Type 2 Diabetes Risk Assessment Tool (AUSDRISK) for predicting the development of type 2 diabetes in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI).


Design and setting: The prospective comparative study (December 2013-March 2014) collected data on AUSDRISK and haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) in participants’ homes.


Participants: Participation rate was 67% (n=79). Study criteria: over 18 years of age, a SCI for more than 12 months, living at home, wheelchair dependant and no diabetes diagnosis.


Main outcome measures: AUSDRISK sensitivity and specificity in predicting incident type 2 diabetes in persons with SCI.


Results: Of the 79 participants, 81% were male, mean age was 53 years (SD 14.14) with 23.2years (median 23; SD +/- 13.2yrs) since injury. There was a positive correlation between length of time since SCI and risk score (AUSDRISK) (r = .242, p = .032). Participants with high AUSDRISK scores had higher HbA1c% (5.38 versus 5.2, p = .026) level. The high risk classification explained a moderate amount of HbA1c % (area under curve = .651; 95% CI .53 - .77). The level of HbA1c which had the highest sensitivity (.59) and specificity (.73) for risk classification was 5.25%. Waist circumference and physical activity items require further powered studies to determine if appropriately weighted.


Conclusion: Comparing the AUSDRISK with HbA1c assays, the AUSDRISK can predict type 2 diabetes risk in a person with S

Abstract 66 | View PDF Downloads 29