| Literature DB >> 25202415 |
Chen-Yen Tsai1, Shou-Chu Chou1, Hsien-Ta Liu2, Jiunn-Diann Lin3, Ying-Chin Lin4.
Abstract
The current study presents a case of persistent hypoglycemia as the initial manifestation of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), as well as a systematic review of the management of hypoglycemia associated with HCC. A 42-year-old female presented with loss of consciousness and a blood glucose level of 30 mg/dl (normal range, 80-140 mg/dl). Abdominal ultrasound and computed tomography were performed to investigate tenderness in the right upper quadrant, and the results revealed a hepatic mass of 15 cm in diameter, with metastasis. A diagnosis of insulinoma was ruled out by examining the insulin level. Prednisolone treatment was ineffective for relieving the persistent hypoglycemia, however, a single dose of palliative radiotherapy reduced the hypoglycemic episodes to once monthly. Due to the advanced disease, the patient refused further treatment, with the exception of a palliative therapy with glucose fluid. The patient succumbed to pneumonia with sepsis. A systematic review of the literature indicated that steroids were the most commonly used drug for hypoglycemia associated with HCC, however, in the majority of cases no effect was noted as observed in this study. Cytoreduction by surgery or systemic chemotherapy has been the most effective treatment. Although rare, hypoglycemia may be the initial symptom of HCC. Cytoreduction is the most effective method of treating hypoglycemia associated with HCC.Entities:
Keywords: hepatocellular carcinoma; hypoglycemia; review; signs and symptoms; steroids
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202415 PMCID: PMC4156172 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1(A) Abdominal ultrasound images revealing a large (>12 cm) mixed echoic hepatic tumor, with ill-defined margins. Computed tomography scans revealing (B) a large hepatic adenoma, with multiple daughter nodules, and (C) multiple daughter nodules in the right lobe of the liver on the coronal view.
Figure 2Flow diagram of study selection.
Summary of the studies included in the systematic review.
| First author/s, year (ref.) | Age, years/gender | Treatment regimen for hypoglycemia | Response to treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| McFadzean and Yeung, 1956 ( | -/- | 200 mg cortisone daily | Cortisone had no effect in one patient; in two patients, the glucose level increased, but withdrawal of cortisone resulted in return of hypoglycemia |
| Klein and Klein, 1959 ( | 62/F | 200 mg cortisone daily | No beneficial effect |
| Schonfeld | 27/M | 60 mg methylprednisolone daily | No effect |
| Wing | 30/M | 8 units growth hormone, intramuscularly | At 30 min after discontinuation of the glucose infusion, the decremental every 8 h for two days change in blood glucose level was −2.8 mmol/l; at 60 min after therapy with growth hormone or prednisolone, the decremental change was attenuated to −1.2 mmol/l |
| Wing | 27/M | 1 mg/kg/day prednisolone, orally for two days | At 30 min after discontinuinuation of glucose infusion, the decremental change in blood glucose level was 3.2 mmol/l; at 60 min after therapy with growth hormone or prednisolone, the decremental change was attenuated to −1.5 mmol/l |
| Yonei | 62/M | Glucagon, oral prednisolone or chemotherapy | Not effective or only a transient effect (Adriamycin and cisplatin) |
| Hof and Vassilopoulou-Sellin, 1998 ( | 34/M | Diazoxide | No beneficial effect |
| Saigal | 24/F | Percutaneous ethanol injection (weekly) for three cycles | Hypoglycemic attacks became infrequent and the intravenous glucose requirement markedly decreased |
| Thipaporn | 36/M | 40 mg/day prednisolone, followed by 2 mg/day dexamethasone | No hypoglycemia on dexamethasone provided the patient received food at midnight; one month of follow-up |
| Nikeghbalian | 77/M | Complete surgical removal of the tumor | Hypoglycemia resolved |
| Kampitak, 2008 ( | 16/M | Systemic chemotherapy with doxorubicin | Temporary resolution of hypoglycemia |
| Matsuyama | 69/M | Dexamethasone | No beneficial effect |
All patients received glucose and feeding.
Three patients studied; age/gender not disclosed.
F, female; M, male.