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A case of insulin allergy successfully managed using multihexamer-forming insulin degludec combined with liraglutide.

Diabet Med · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

A 38-year-old woman with Type 2 diabetes developed skin reactions to multiple rapid-acting and long-acting insulin formulations, except insulin degludec. After switching to insulin degludec combined with liraglutide, her allergic reactions disappeared and her blood sugar control improved.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabet Med, 2016
Citations4
Relative citation ratio0.18
NIH percentile12
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Insulin allergy, one of insulin's adverse effects, is rare, especially in patients with Type 2 diabetes, but management is difficult and no effective strategy has yet been established. We experienced an insulin allergy case successfully managed with a novel combination of insulins. CASE REPORT: A 38-year-old woman started insulin therapy when diabetes was diagnosed at age 19 years. Despite poorly controlled diabetes because of poor adherence, she hoped to conceive a child and continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion was introduced using insulin aspart at age 32 years. One month thereafter, she developed skin reactions at the subcutaneous insulin infusion catheter insertion site. The patient was then tested for all rapid-acting insulin formulations, all of which triggered local reactions. She decided to continue the continuous subcutaneous infusion of human regular insulin, accompanied by oral cetirizine hydrochloride and betamethasone valerate ointment. The patient was admitted to our hospital at age 38 years with high HbA levels. She was tested for all long-acting insulin analogues. All results, except for insulin degludec, were positive. She discontinued continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion and switched to insulin degludec combined with liraglutide. The allergic reactions had completely disappeared and her blood glucose was well controlled by the time of discharge. CONCLUSION: Our patient was allergic to all insulin formulations except insulin degludec. Her allergic reactions completely disappeared after switching to insulin degludec. The crystallized structure of this insulin might mask its skin allergen antigenicity. Furthermore, her postprandial hyperglycaemia was successfully controlled with liraglutide. We propose multihexamer-forming ultra-long-acting insulin plus glucagon-like peptide-1 analogues as a therapeutic option for patients with insulin allergy.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26485621 ↗

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