| Literature DB >> 27909691 |
Julie Fudvoye1, Khaldoun Farhat2, Virginie De Halleux3, Corina Ramona Nicolescu4.
Abstract
Diabetes, rare in the neonatal period, should be evoked in every newborn presenting with unexplained intrauterine and early postnatal growth retardation. This case report illustrates the clinical course and therapeutic approach of a newborn diagnosed with transient diabetes. The baby was born at 37 weeks of gestation with a severe intrauterine growth restriction. Except a mild macroglossia and signs of growth restriction, physical examination was normal. On the fifth day of life, hyperglycemia (180 mg/dl) was noted, and the next day, the diagnosis of diabetes was confirmed (high blood sugar, glucosuria, undetectable levels of insulin and C-peptide). Insulin infusion, initially intravenously and then subcutaneously, was started, tailored to assure the growth catch-up and normalize the blood sugar levels. At the age of 4 weeks, the baby returned at home under pump. At 8 weeks, the clinical impression of evolution to a transient diabetes (decreasing needs of insulin with very satisfactory weight gain) was genetically confirmed (paternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 6). There is no screening for neonatal diabetes, but the clinical suspicion avoids the metabolic decompensation and allows early initiation of insulin therapy. The genetic approach (for disease itself and its associated features) relies on timely clinical updates.Entities:
Keywords: chromosome 6q24; intrauterine growth restriction; transient neonatal diabetes
Year: 2016 PMID: 27909691 PMCID: PMC5112232 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2016.00124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Insulin requirement evolution.
Figure 2Glycemic variations during intravenous insulin therapy.
Figure 3Glycemic variations on CSII (the first 3 weeks).
Newborn data summary.
| Birth parameters | GA (weeks) | Weight (g/percentiles) | Height (cm/percentiles) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 37 | 1980 (<3rd P) | 43 cm (<3rd P) | |
| Diagnosis | Age | Weight | Biological parameters |
| 6 days | 1890 g | Glycemia 400 mg/dl | |
| Glucosuria++ | |||
| No ketonuria | |||
| Insulin 1.4–1.6 mUI/l (2–17) | |||
| C peptide 0.14–0.16 nmol/l (0.37–1.47) | |||
| Insulin therapy | Intravenous | CSII | Age of discontinuation |
| From 6 to 17 days of life (total of 11 days) | From 17 days to 8 weeks of life | 8 weeks | |
| Genetic diagnosis | PND excluded (no INS, KCNJ11 and ABCC8 gene pathogenic mutations) | TND confirmed (complete loss of methylation on chromosome 6q24 – paternal uniparental isodisomy) | |
| Age of 6 weeks | Age of 8 weeks | ||
| Clinical follow-up (months) | 3 | 6 | 9 |
| Weight 5400 g (15th P) | Weight 6820 g (3rd–15th P) | Weight 8000 g (15th P) | |
| Length 58 cm (15th P) | Length 64 cm (15th P) | Length 69 cm (15th P) | |
| Head circumference 36 cm | Head circumference 42 cm | Head circumference 44.5 cm (15th P) |
P, percentile; CSII, continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion; PND, permanent neonatal diabetes; TND, transient neonatal diabetes; INS, insulin.