Management of Insulin Autoimmune Hypoglycaemia: Single‐centre experience from Western India with systematic review of world literature

2020 
BACKGROUND: Awareness about Insulin Autoimmune Hypoglycaemia (IAH) and its management remains limited. METHODOLOGY: We describe two cohorts: Cohort 1 (n = 7) included patients with IAH from a tertiary care centre in India and Cohort 2 (n = 294) included systematic review of published English literature from PubMed. They were compared with our insulinoma patients (n = 41). RESULTS: Cohort 1 included seven female patients where two had drugs (carbimazole and thiocolchicoside) as triggering factors. Except for one patient requiring oral prednisolone, others had spontaneous remission. The unique features from our series are being first case series of IAH from India and reporting of second case of thiocolchicoside triggered IAH. Cohort 2 had 294 patients identified from 149 publications. Mean age was 54 +/- 19 years. Thirty-five different triggers were identified from 160 cases. Antithyroid drugs were most common triggers in Japanese patients and most common HLA allele was DRB1*0406, while it was alpha-lipoic acid and HLA DRB1*0403 in non-Asians. Serum Insulin >100 microIU/mL and insulin to C-peptide molar ratio (ICMR) >0.25 had specificity of 100% and 97.5%, respectively, for IAH as compared to insulinoma. 56% patients had remission with complex carbohydrate diet and trigger removal while 43% required immunosuppressants. 70% achieved remission within 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Middle age remains most common age group. Sulfhydryl drugs are most common triggers. Serum Insulin >100 microIU/mL and ICMR > 0.25 in critical sample are good predictors for diagnosis of IAH, which needs to be confirmed by IAA. Conservative management with dietary modification and trigger removal usually suffices in majority. Rests need immunosuppressants.
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