Szilard Voros, MD, talks about one of the most surprising aspects of the DPMP testing. Several hundred patients participated initially with their providers. The baseline panel results were given to their doctors who used the results to work with their patients. After the second test, results indicated that around a third of the patients had reverted at least one ADA category, for example, improving from a diabetic to a prediabetic glucose level. The key, Dr. Voros believes, is giving the information to the physician and making it actionable.
Other videos with Dr. Voros:
- Szilard Voros, MD, FACC, FSCCT, FAHA: Introduction
- New Panel of Tests (DPMP) Identifies Diabetes and CV Risk Earlier
- Beta-cell Dysfunction Not Always Seen with Standard Tests
- What A1c Level Indicates Prediabetes?
- What are the Bio-markers of Beta-cell Dysfunction?
- Testing for Type 1, 1.5, 2 Diabetes
- Is Health Diagnostic Laboratory’s New Test Panel for Diabetes Available?
- Could the Health Diagnostics Lab test replace other older tests?
- How Is the DPMP Test Done?
- With the DPMP, are providers given analysis with suggested actions?
- Does the DPMP include CV data?
- Are insurance companies paying for DPMP test yet?
- Is Cycloset under-appreciated for CV benefits?
- SGLT2 Inhibitors
Szilard Voros, MD, FACC, FSCCT, FAHA, is a Hungarian-born American cardiologist and globally renowned leading research scientist in advanced cardiovascular imaging, biomarkers, lipoprotein metabolism and genomics. He currently serves as an Associate Professor of Medicine/Cardiology and Radiology, and Director of Advanced Cardiovascular MR and CT Research at the Department of Radiology and Cardiology at Stony Brook University Medical Center, State University of New York. He previously served as the Chief Scientific Officer, Chief of Cardiovascular Prevention, and Medical Director of Cardiac MR and CT at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, and as a Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine at the Medical College of Georgia. He is a founding member and Fellow of the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (FSCCT), Fellow of the American College of Cardiology (FACC) and Fellow of the American Heart Association (FAHA).