Journal of Diabetes Investigation (Mar 2024)
Recurrent hypoglycemia induced by clopidogrel: A case report and mini review
Abstract
Abstract This report describes a patient who developed recurrent hypoglycemia episodes after 23 days of antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel for left subclavian artery stent implantation. The patient suffered from palpitation, profuse sweating and weakness on the 23rd day of clopidogrel treatment. The minimum plasma glucose was 2.2 mmol/L, and the hypoglycemia was associated with significantly elevated levels of insulin. A diagnosis of insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS) was made with the presence of insulin autoantibody and a comprehensive differential diagnosis of other conditions related with hypoglycemia. Clopidogrel was stopped, and the patient was treated with acarbose and had frequent low‐carbohydrate meals; his hypoglycemia did not occur within 10 days. To date, seven cases of IAS induced by clopidogrel have been reported. Most reported cases were male aged in their 70s, and the hypoglycemic attack appeared 1–4 weeks after exposure to clopidogrel, characterized by severe hyperinsulinemia hypoglycemia with high titers of insulin autoantibodies. Most IAS cases can resolve spontaneously when they stop using the trigger medicine. Severe cases had been treated with drugs that reduce pancreatic insulin secretion (such as somatostatin and diazoxide), immunosuppressants (glucocorticoids, azathioprine and rituximab) and even immunoadsorption to remove the insulin autoantibody from the body. Considering the hypoglycemic attack might increase the risk of cardiovascular events among patients taking clopidogrel, we recommend that doctors should be aware of IAS as a rare severe adverse effect of clopidogrel, and be vigilant for the symptoms related with hypoglycemia in clopidogrel users.
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