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Liraglutide improved glycaemic instability in a patient with diabetes with insulin antibodies.

BMJ Case Rep · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

A 52-year-old man with diabetes and insulin antibodies struggled with high blood sugar control, with HbA1c levels reaching 8.0% (64 mmol/mol) despite multiple treatments. After switching to liraglutide and insulin glargine in November 2014, his HbA1c dropped to about 7.5% (58 mmol/mol) even as insulin antibody levels rose from 32.6 to over 50.0 U/mL.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBMJ Case Rep, 2016
Citations3
Relative citation ratio0.15
NIH percentile10
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Insulin antibodies sometimes cause glucose instability. A 52-year-old male patient was admitted to our department for the treatment of diabetes mellitus. From October 2003, he received insulin treatment for autoimmune pancreatitis and diabetes mellitus, but his hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels gradually reached 8.0% (64 mmol/mol IFCC). In January 2010, insulin glargine and insulin aspart were introduced. In April 2010, the insulin antibody titre rose to >13.6 U/mL. In July 2010, treatment was changed to insulin glargine, metformin and miglitol. In November 2011, a further change to insulin glargine, metformin and sitagliptin was made. The insulin antibody titres gradually decreased, but HbA1c levels remained high. In November 2014, liraglutide and insulin glargine were introduced and the HbA1c levels decreased dramatically to ∼7.5% (58 mmol/mol IFCC) despite increasing insulin antibody titres (from 32.6 to >50.0 U/mL). Liraglutide successfully improved glycaemic instability due to insulin antibodies without modulating plasma insulin levels.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27440852 ↗

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