| Literature DB >> 29695048 |
Michaela Plamper1, Bettina Gohlke2, Felix Schreiner3, Joachim Woelfle4.
Abstract
Mutations in the insulin receptor (INSR) gene underlie rare severe INSR-related insulin resistance syndromes (SIR), including insulin resistance type A, Rabson⁻Mendenhall syndrome and Donohue syndrome (DS), with DS representing the most severe form of insulin resistance. Treatment of these cases is challenging, with the majority of DS patients dying within the first two years of life. rhIGF-I (mecasermin) has been reported to improve metabolic control and increase lifespan in DS patients. A case report and literature review were completed. We present a case involving a male patient with DS, harbouring a homozygous mutation in the INSR gene (c.591delC). Initial rhIGF-I application via BID (twice daily) injection was unsatisfactory, but continuous subcutaneous rhIGF-I infusion via an insulin pump improved weight development and diabetes control (HbA1c decreased from 10 to 7.6%). However, our patient died at 22 months of age during the course of a respiratory infection in in Libya. Currently available data in the literature comprising more than 30 treated patients worldwide seem to support a trial of rhIGF-I in SIR. rhIGF-I represents a treatment option for challenging SIR cases, but careful consideration of the therapeutic benefits and the burden of the disease is warranted. Continuous application via pump might be advantageous compared to single injections.Entities:
Keywords: Donohue syndrome; mecasermin; rhIGF-I; severe insulin resistance syndromes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29695048 PMCID: PMC5983765 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19051268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Characteristic clinical features of subjects with Donohue syndrome (DS), Rabson–Mendenhall Syndrome (RMS) and Type A Insulin Resistance (Type A IR) [3,5,6,7,8,10,49,50,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63].
| DS | RMS | Type A Insulin Resistance | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Homozygous mutation in the insulin receptor (INSR) gene | Compound heterozygous mutation in INSR gene | Mutation in the insulin receptor gene (autosomal-dominant or autosomal-recessive) |
|
| Proptosis | Resembling DS | Normal phenotype |
| Infraorbital folds | or milder phenotype | ||
| Large, posteriorly rotated ears | |||
| Thick lips | |||
| Gingival hyperplasia | |||
| Broad nasal tip | |||
|
| Large hands and feet (relative to body) | Early dentition and dental crowding | Usually not obese |
| Abdominal distension | |||
| Reduced lateral thoracic dimension | |||
| Hyperplasia of nipples | Hyperplasia of nipples | ||
| Genital enlargement | Genital enlargement | ||
| Intrauterine growth restriction | Growth retardation (less severe than in DS) | Normal growth | |
| Postnatal failure to thrive | |||
|
| Organomegaly (kidney, liver, spleen) | Organomegaly (kidney, liver, spleen) | |
| Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCOM) | Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | ||
| Nephrocalcinosis | Nephrocalcinosis | ||
| Enlarged polycystic ovaries | Enlarged polycystic ovaries | Polycystic ovaries | |
| Rectal prolapse | |||
| Cholestasis | Retinopathy | ||
|
| Hypertrichosis | Hypertrichosis | Hirsutism |
| Acanthosis nigricans | Acanthosis nigricans | Acanthosis nigricans | |
| Hyperkeratosis | |||
| Thick, hyperelastic skin | |||
| Dry skin | |||
| Decreased subcutaneous fat mass | |||
|
| Hyperinsulinemia | Same as DS in first year | Hyperinsulinemia or |
| Extremely elevated plasma insulin and C-peptide levels | of live | extreme resistance to exogenous insulin | |
| Hyperglycemia | Resulting in increased | Hyperandrogenism | |
| Fasting hypoglycemia | glucose levels, fewer | Increased serum testosterone | |
| Absence of ketoacidosis | Risk of ketoacidosis | ||
| Decreased IGF-I and IGFBP-3 serum concentrations | Decreased IGF-I levels and IGFBP-3 | ||
|
| Severe global developmental delay | Variable developmental | No general impairment |
| Axial hypotonia | delay to normal | ||
| Muscle atrophy | Intelligence | ||
|
| Usually death within first two years of life, due to intercurrent infections, severe hypoglycemia, cardiomyopathy | Usually death within second decade of life, due to ketoacidosis or microvascular complications |
Figure 1Mecasermin delivery in mg/h via an insulin pump in the reported patient.
Figure 2Glucose profile using a continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) before (a) and after (b) initiation of continuous subcutaneous mecasermin infusion via an insulin pump.
Therapeutic efficiency of available treatment options in SIR.
| Treatment Option | DS | RMS | Type A IR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nutrition: | |||
| Frequent/continuous feeding | Prevents fasting hypoglycaemia | Prevents fasting hypoglycaemia | |
| Avoidance of high carbohydrate diet | Useful | Useful | |
| Insulin sensitizer | No effect | Early usage recommended. Improvement of hyperglycaemia | Early usage recommended. Improvement of hyperglycaemia |
| High dose insulin | No effect | Improvement of hyperglycaemia, catabolic state, weight loss and microvascular complications [ | Improvement of hyperglycaemia, catabolic state and microvascular complications [ |
| Metreleptin | No assessment available | Improvement of HbA1c [ | No study with type A IR patients available. |
| Mecasermin (rhIGF-I) | See | See | See |
Figure 3Putative effects of rhIGF-I on glucose homeostasis.
Treatment trials with rhIGF-I in patients with severe INSR-related insulin resistance syndromes (SIR).
| Author | Treatment Duration of rhIGF-I | SIR Syndrome (n) | Dosage | Efficacy and Safety |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quin et al., 1990 [ | Short term | RMS (1 patient) | 100 μg/kg/day i.v. | Blood glucose, plasma insulin, C-Peptide and growth hormone (GH) declined |
| Schoenle et al., 1991 [ | Short term | Type A IR (3 patients) | 100 μg/kg/day i.v. | Blood glucose, plasma insulin and C-peptide decreased |
| Hussain et al., 1993 [ | Short term | Type A IR (1 patient) | 160 μg/kg/day s.c. | Lowering of fasting and postprandial blood glucose, insulin and C-peptide levels |
| Kuzuya et al., 1993 [ | Up to 16 months | Type A IR (6 patients) | 100 to 400 μg/kg/day | Lowering of fasting and postprandial glucose. Decrease of HbA1c and fructosamine |
| Morrow et al., 1994 [ | 3–4 weeks | Type A without insulin receptor mutations (2 patients) | 100 μg s.c. | Reduction of blood glucose level, enhancement of insulin sensitivity |
| Backeljauw, 1994 [ | 66 h and 62 h | DS (2 patients) | Up to 110 μg/kg/h and 40 μg/kg/h i.v. | No apparent glucose lowering effect, decrease in insulin concentration |
| Zenobi, 1994 [ | 5 days | Type A IR (2 patients) | 150 μg/kg 2x/day s.c. | Decrease of fasting blood glucose. Decrease in fasting insulin and C-peptide by 65% |
| Longo et al., 1994 [ | 16 months | RMS (1 patient) | Up to 100 μg/kg/day s.c. | No significant effect on glycaemic control and growth |
| Nakashima et al., 1995 [ | 9 months | Type A IR (1 patient) | 0.08–0.2 mg/kg/day s.c. | Decrease in blood glucose level, free fatty acid concentration, HbA1c; enhanced insulin sensitivity, improvement of acanthosis nigricans |
| Vestergaard et al., 1997 [ | 2 weeks high dose rhIGF-I | SIR (4 patients) | 60 μg/kg 2x/day s.c. | Reduction of fasting blood glucose and insulin |
| 10 weeks low dose rhIGF-I | SIR (3 patients) | 40 μg/kg/day s.c. | ||
| Takahashi et al., 1997 [ | 6 months | Leprechaunism—1 patient | 100 μg/kg/day up to 1000 μg/kg/day | Fasting blood glucose, insulin, HbA1c, body weight and development improved |
| Nakae et al., 1998 [ | 6 years and 10 months | DS (?) or RMS (?) (1 patient at different time points) | Up to 1.6 mg/kg/day | Maintained growth rate, HbA1c near normal range |
| Kitamei et al., 2004 [ | Intermittent and continuous s.c injection | Adult height was 143 cm (−2.7 SDS for Japanese girls) | ||
| Jo et al., 2013 [ | Withdrawl of rhIGF-I treatment at 18 years, due to diabetic ketoacidosis and start of high dose insulin | Recurrent episodes of ketoacidosis. HbA1c up to 12–13% | ||
| Regan et al., 2010 [ | 16 weeks | Type A IR (5 patients) | 0.5–2 mg/kg rhIGF-I/rhIGFBP-3 | HbA1c improvement, reduction of acanthosis nigricans |
| Weber et al., 2014 [ | 16 months (from 19 months up to 35 months—death of the patient) | DS (1 patient) | BID 80 up to 640 μg/kg/day s.c.; | HbA1c improvement from 9.5 to 7.7%, rebound to 9.8% |
| De Kerdanet et al., 2015 [ | 8.7 years; | DS (1 patient) | IGF-I/IGFBP3 combination, subsequ. IGF-I alone 50 μg/kg/day s.c. | Decrease in mean glycaemia with large variation. Improvement of growth. |
| Carmody et al., 2016 [ | 5 years | RMS (1 patient) | rhIGF-I up to 1.72 U/kg 2x/day s.c. + metformin | Decrease in insulin, homa index and HbA1c. Growth maintained within target height range. |
Adverse effects of mecasermin treatment in conditions other than SIR and in patients with SIR.
| Adverse Effects | Indication Other than SIR [ | SIR |
|---|---|---|
| Hypoglycaemia | 50–86% | +++ |
| Mild pain/erythema at injection side | +++ | ++ [ |
| Paresthesia and painful toes | ++ [ | |
| Lipohypertrophy | 1/3 | |
| (Asymptomatic) tachycardia | +++ | + |
| Parotid swelling | + | |
| Facial nerve palsy | + | |
| Retinopathy/worsening of retinopathy | + | + [ |
| Muscle pain * | + | + [ |
| Fluid retention/edema * | + | + [ |
| Arthritis * | + | + [ |
| Benign intracranial hypertension /papilledema | 5% | + [ |
| Lymphoid tissue hypertrophy: tonsillar hypertrophy | 25% (>10% require surgical intervention) | + [ |
| Thymic hypertrophy | 35% (X-ray) | |
| Mastitis | ? [ | |
| Endometrial cancer | + [ |
* dose related, high doses were given. # Nakae, Kitamei and Jo et al. report information about the same patient at different ages. +: rarely reported, ++: frequently reported, +++: common feature.