Olsen C L, Chan E, Turner D S, Iravani M, Nagy M, Selam J L, Wong N D, Waxman K, Charles M A
Department of Medicine, University of California, Irvine 92717.
Diabetes Care. 1994 Mar;17(3):169-76. doi: 10.2337/diacare.17.3.169.
To determine whether insulin antibodies are generated in diabetic patients after short- and long-term intraperitoneal insulin use and, if so, whether they are of potential clinical interest. Insulin antibodies commonly develop in diabetic patients who use subcutaneous human insulin, although their clinical significance remains controversial. Few data are available regarding insulin antibody responses to intraperitoneal insulin.
We studied insulin antibody levels and clinical diabetes control in 25 type 1 diabetic patients treated for 3-6 years with intraperitoneal surfactant-stabilized porcine modified human insulin delivered by implantable programmable insulin delivery systems.
All patients had preimplantation insulin antibody levels < 20 microU/ml, with a mean value of 2 +/- 2 microU/ml (1 SD). Mean antibody levels increased throughout the study period to a mean maximum of 197 +/- 326 microU/ml (P < 0.02) with 11 of 25 (44%) patients' levels exceeding 20 microU/ml (insulin responders). The mean time to significant antibody development was 21.8 +/- 4.4 months. Of the 11 responder patients, 4 had clinical syndromes that consisted of increasing daily insulin requirements and/or nocturnal hypoglycemia despite minimal nighttime basal insulin infusion rates associated with peak antibody levels > 200 microU/ml. None of the nonresponder patients (antibody levels < 20 microU/ml) had these clinical findings.
Our results indicate that insulin antibody levels observed during intraperitoneal administration of human insulin are 1) similar to those reported during subcutaneous administration; although the rise in antibody level may be delayed compared with subcutaneous human insulin, 2) associated with a patient subset who are insulin antibody responders after switching from subcutaneous to intraperitoneal human insulin, 3) associated with a decrease in levels among responder patients regardless of whether they discontinue or continue pump use, and 4) associated with increased insulin needs and/or nocturnal hypoglycemia despite minimal basal rate insulin infusion at nighttime when antibody levels exceed 200 microU/ml.
确定糖尿病患者短期和长期腹腔内使用胰岛素后是否会产生胰岛素抗体,若产生,其是否具有潜在临床意义。使用皮下人胰岛素的糖尿病患者通常会产生胰岛素抗体,但其临床意义仍存在争议。关于腹腔内胰岛素的抗体反应的数据较少。
我们研究了25例1型糖尿病患者的胰岛素抗体水平及临床糖尿病控制情况,这些患者使用可植入式可编程胰岛素输送系统腹腔内给予表面活性剂稳定的猪修饰人胰岛素治疗3至6年。
所有患者植入前胰岛素抗体水平<20微单位/毫升,平均值为2±2微单位/毫升(标准差1)。在整个研究期间,平均抗体水平升高,平均最高值达到197±326微单位/毫升(P<0.02),25例患者中有11例(44%)的水平超过20微单位/毫升(胰岛素反应者)。抗体显著产生的平均时间为21.8±4.4个月。在11例反应者患者中,4例出现临床综合征,表现为每日胰岛素需求量增加和/或夜间低血糖,尽管夜间基础胰岛素输注率最低,但抗体水平峰值>200微单位/毫升。无反应者患者(抗体水平<20微单位/毫升)均无这些临床发现。
我们的结果表明,腹腔内给予人胰岛素期间观察到的胰岛素抗体水平:1)与皮下给药期间报告的水平相似;尽管与皮下人胰岛素相比,抗体水平升高可能延迟,2)与从皮下改为腹腔内使用人胰岛素后成为胰岛素抗体反应者的患者亚组相关,3)与反应者患者的水平降低相关,无论他们是否停止或继续使用泵,4)与抗体水平超过200微单位/毫升时夜间基础胰岛素输注率最低情况下胰岛素需求增加和/或夜间低血糖相关。