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Fructosamine

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Short-Term Glycemic Marker – Reflects Average Glucose Over 2–3 Weeks)

Synonyms

  • Fructosamine
  • Glycated serum proteins (GSP)
  • Glycated albumin fraction
  • Ketoamine-linked albumin
  • Short-term glycemic index

Units of Measurement

  • µmol/L
  • mmol/L

Unit Conversions

1 mmol/L = 1000 µmol/L
(Most laboratories report in µmol/L)

Description

Fructosamine refers to glycated serum proteins, predominantly glycated albumin, formed when glucose non-enzymatically binds to serum proteins.

Because serum proteins have a shorter half-life (≈14–21 days), fructosamine reflects:

  • Average blood glucose over the past 2–3 weeks
  • Shorter-term glycemic control compared to HbA1c (8–12 weeks)

It is especially useful when HbA1c is unreliable.

Physiological Role

Fructosamine itself has no biological function.
It is simply a measurable indicator of recent glycation of serum proteins.

Clinical Significance

High Fructosamine

Indicates:

  • Poor glycemic control (past 2–3 weeks)
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Uncontrolled diabetes
  • Pregnancy-related diabetes
  • Steroid-induced hyperglycemia

Associated Risks:

  • Rapid glucose fluctuations
  • Increased complications
  • Need for therapy adjustment

Low Fructosamine

May occur in:

  • Hypoproteinemia
  • Nephrotic syndrome
  • Cirrhosis
  • Severe malnutrition
  • High protein turnover
  • After recent albumin infusion

Also falsely low when total serum protein is reduced.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + AACE + Mayo + ARUP)

Typical Reference Range

  • 205 – 285 µmol/L (non-diabetic adults)

Interpretation

Fructosamine (µmol/L)Interpretation
<205Hypoglycemia, low proteins, or good control
205–285Normal, non-diabetic
286–320Borderline high; mild hyperglycemia
321–375Moderately high; poor control
>375Significant hyperglycemia (poor control)
>450Very poor control, high-risk

Values vary slightly by method and laboratory.

Clinical Uses

1. Glycemic Monitoring When HbA1c Is Unreliable

Use fructosamine in patients with:

  • Hemoglobinopathies (SCD, thalassemia)
  • Hemolytic anemia
  • Recent blood transfusion
  • Pregnancy
  • CKD with altered erythrocyte lifespan
  • Post-acute changes in glucose therapy

2. Rapid Assessment of Therapy Adjustments

Useful for monitoring:

  • Insulin titration
  • Medication changes
  • Steroid-induced hyperglycemia

3. Pregnancy & Gestational Diabetes

Reflects short-term glucose status when quick adjustments are needed.

4. Neonatal Diabetes

Helpful in babies where HbA1c cannot be used.

Correlation with HbA1c (approximate)

(Not a true conversion but clinically used guidance)

Fructosamine (µmol/L)Approx. HbA1c (%)
2055.5%
2456.5%
2857.5%
3459.0%
40010–11%

Note: These correlations vary by protein status.

Analytical Notes

  • Serum sample
  • No fasting required
  • Measured by colorimetric nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) assay or enzymatic methods
  • Hemolysis and lipemia may interfere
  • Low serum albumin reduces fructosamine independent of glucose

Clinical Pearls

  • Fructosamine reflects the previous 2–3 weeks, ideal for rapid monitoring.
  • Use fructosamine when HbA1c is unreliable.
  • Low albumin falsely lowers fructosamine — always check serum protein.
  • In pregnancy, fructosamine correlates better with maternal glucose trends than HbA1c.
  • Fructosamine tracks improvements much faster after therapy changes.

Interesting Fact

Fructosamine (glycated protein) formation was first identified in the early 20th century and paved the way for understanding HbA1c as a long-term marker.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Diabetes Markers.
  2. ADA & AACE Guidelines - Glycemic Monitoring.
  3. IFCC Recommendations - Glycation Markers.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Fructosamine.
  5. ARUP Consult - Diabetes Testing.
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - Fructosamine Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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