Frontiers in Endocrinology (Jan 2024)

Case report: Insulinomatosis: description of four sporadic cases and review of the literature

  • Delmar Muniz Lourenço,
  • Delmar Muniz Lourenço,
  • Maria Lucia Corrêa-Giannella,
  • Sheila Aparecida Coelho Siqueira,
  • Marcia Nery,
  • Flavio Galvão Ribeiro,
  • Elizangela Pereira de Souza Quedas,
  • Manoel de Souza Rocha,
  • Ramon Marcelino do Nascimento,
  • Maria Adelaide Albergaria Pereira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1308662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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The best-known etiologies of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia are insulinoma, non-insulinoma pancreatogenous hypoglycemic syndrome, autoimmune processes, and factitious hypoglycemia. In 2009, a disease not associated with classic genetic syndromes and characterized by the presence of multiple pancreatic lesions was described and named insulinomatosis. We present the clinical and pathologic features of four patients with the diagnosis of insulinomatosis, aggregated new clinical data, reviewed extensively the literature, and illustrated the nature and evolution of this recently recognized disease. One of our patients had isolated (without fasting hypoglycemia) postprandial hypoglycemia, an occurrence not previously reported in the literature. Furthermore, we reported the second case presenting malignant disease. All of them had persistent/recurrent hypoglycemia after the first surgery even with pathology confirming the presence of a positive insulin neuroendocrine tumor. In the literature review, 27 sporadic insulinomatosis cases were compiled. All of them had episodes of fasting hypoglycemia except one of our patients. Only two patients had malignant disease, and one of them was from our series. The suspicion of insulinomatosis can be raised before surgery in patients without genetic syndromes, with multiple tumors in the topographic investigation and in those who had persistent or recurrent hypoglycemia after surgical removal of one or more tumors. The definitive diagnosis is established by histology and immunohistochemistry and requires examination of the “macroscopically normal pancreas.” Our case series reinforces the marked predominance in women, the high frequency of recurrent hypoglycemia, and consequently, a definitive poor response to the usual surgical treatment.

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