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Endocrine Abstracts (2019) 63 P623 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.63.P623

ECE2019 Poster Presentations Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism 2 (100 abstracts)

Myeloproliferative disorder: a rare cause of insulin auto-immune syndrome leading to recurrent severe hypoglycaemia

Jelloul Emna 1 , Benedicte Fontaine 1 , Stephane Vanderbecken 2 , Pascal Meliani 3 , Candice Kembellec 1 , Ania Flaus-Furmaniuk 1 & Xavier Debussche 1,


1Department of Endocrinology Diabetology Nutrition, Felix Guyon University Hospital, Saint-Denis, La Reunion, France; 2Department of Hematology Diabetology Nutrition, Felix Guyon University Hospital, Saint-Denis, La Reunion, France; 3Department of Medicine, Mayotte Hospital Center, Mayotte, France; 4CIC 1410 INSERM, CHU de la Reunion, Saint-Denis, La Reunion, France.


Insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS; Hirata syndrome) is a rare cause of hypoglycemia. It seems to be related to specific HLA class II alleles. Rarely, monoclonal antibody acts as an insulin-binding autoantibody: until now 10 cases have been described in association with a myeloproliferative disorder. In June 2015, a 60-year-old patient presented in a local hospital in Mayotte with confusion, sweating and severe hypoglycemia (blood glucose as low as 20 mg/dl). He was suffering of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and had no history of diabetes neither use of any drug or hypoglycaemic agent. His physical examination revealed obesity: IMC 34 kg/m2. Laboratory evaluation showed anemia (Hb 9.2 g/dl). Liver, renal, thyroid and adrenal functions were all normal. Fasting blood sugar was 28 mg/dl with total plasma insulin level of 788 mU/l. He was thus referred to our center in La Reunion, for further investigations: magnetic resonance of the abdomen and ultrasound failed to detect lesions or suspicious masses suggesting insulinoma. A plasma-protein electrophoresis revealed a restricted gammaglobulin band of 1 g/l. Immunoelectrophoresis revealed a monoclonal IgG kappa. But the bone marrow biopsy didn’t show excess of plasma cells (<2%). At 72-h observed fast, there was no hypoglycemia. A 75-gram oral glucose tolerance test caused a severe hypoglycemia after 4 hours (25 mg/dl) with total insulinemia level of 247 (T0) reaching 1722 mU/l (3 h). Concurrently, free insulin level was 10.3 (T0) and reached 63.5 mU/l (3 h) and C-peptide level: 1.12 (T0) and 6.18 μg/l (3 h). These results led to consider an insulin auto-immune syndrome (IAS). Indeed, the dosage of antihuman insulin antibodies (IAA) showed a high level > 50 u/ml. Infectious serologic testing and autoimmune marker were all negative. The serologic typing of HLA alleles was not in favour of HLA DR4. He went back to Mayotte. Despite 2 years treatment (Rituximab-Prednisolone every 2 months), hypoglycaemic events persisted and he was again referred in 2018. High level of insulin antibodies was still found and the IgG level increased to 3.1 g/l (plasma cells < 10% in the marrow). His treatment regimen was changed to bortezomib and high dose of dexamethasone with subsequent remission of hypoglycemia, decrease of IgG level (0.8 g/l) and antihuman insulin antibodies after 8 cycles. In conclusion, the search for paraproteinemia should be undertaken in Hirata syndrome or IAS particularly in case of relapse to immunosuppressive drug.

Volume 63

21st European Congress of Endocrinology

Lyon, France
18 May 2019 - 21 May 2019

European Society of Endocrinology 

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