Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism Case Reports (May 2020)

Type B insulin resistance syndrome in a patient with type 1 diabetes

  • Åke Sjöholm,
  • Maria João Pereira,
  • Thomas Nilsson,
  • Torbjörn Linde,
  • Petros Katsogiannos,
  • Jan Saaf,
  • Jan W Eriksson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1530/EDM-19-0157
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Type B insulin resistance syndrome (TBIRS) is a very rare autoimmune disorder with polyclonal autoantibodies against the insulin receptor, resulting in severe and refractory hyperglycemia. Described here is a patient who within a few months after the onset of autoimmune type 1 diabetes increased her insulin requirements more than 20-fold; despite this she had considerable difficulty maintaining a plasma glucose value of <40–60 mmol/L (720–1100 mg/dL). On suspicion of TBIRS, the patient was started on tapering dose of glucocorticoids to overcome the autoimmune insulin receptor blockade, resulting in an immediate and pronounced effect. Within days, insulin requirements decreased by 80–90% and plasma glucose stabilized around 7–8 mmol/L (126–144 mg/dL). The presence of antibodies to the insulin receptor was detected by immunoprecipitation and binding assays. After a 4-month remission on low maintenance dose prednisolone, the patient relapsed, which required repeated plasmaphereses and immune column treatments with temporarily remarkable effect. Mixed and transient results were seen with rituximab, mycophenolic acid and bortezomib, but the glycemic status remained suboptimal. Lack of compliance and recurrent infections may have contributed to this.

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