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Short Communications

Variability in insulin pharmacokinetics following high-dose insulin therapy

ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 389-391 | Received 14 Apr 2021, Accepted 07 Aug 2021, Published online: 15 Sep 2021
 

Abstract

Introduction

High dose insulin (HDI) therapy for cardiogenic shock from acute poisoning can be complicated by treatable hypoglycemia which persists following poisoning recovery. Glucose requirements post-HDI reflect supraphysiological insulin plasma concentration. A publication reported a patient treated with HDI with plasma insulin concentrations >1000 µU/mL and elimination half-life 10–18 h requiring intravenous glucose replacement for >5 days. We report two cases treated with HDI (Actrapid; soluble or regular insulin) with shorter elimination half-lives.

Case reports

A man ingesting diltiazem received HDI for approximately 60 h (maximum dose 10 U/kg/h) and supplemental intravenous dextrose for 44 h post-HDI. Post-HDI the maximum measured plasma insulin concentration was 6345 µU/mL and elimination half-life 5.5 h. A man ingesting propranolol received HDI for approximately 12 h (maximum dose 1.5 U/kg/h) and supplemental intravenous dextrose for 4 h post-HDI. Post-HDI the maximum measured plasma insulin concentration was 368 µU/mL and elimination half-life 2.2 h.

Discussion

Markedly different insulin pharmacokinetics post-HDI is observed in two cases and a previously published report, and factors contributing to the interpatient differences are poorly defined. This pharmacokinetic variability impacts on the severity and duration of treatable hypoglycemia post-HDI. Analytical factors impacting on the measured plasma insulin concentrations include appropriate sample dilution and differing analytical specificity for the type of insulin.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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