Pharmacokinetics of insulin disappearance after massive overdosing

Long-term glucose supplementation is required to prevent hypoglycemia after massive insulin overdosing. We fitted the blood insulin concentration-time profile to the model: I = A·exp(–a·t) + B·exp(–b·t), where I (μU/mL) is the serum/plasma insulin concentration, A (μU/mL) and B (μU/mL) are the peak...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inENDOCRINE JOURNAL Vol. 65; no. 11; pp. 1147 - 1153
Main Authors Sato, Yuka, Mizuno, Yuta, Suganuma, Kazuki, Shiroto, Kosuke, Ikeda, Takeshi, Yamashita, Koh, Kimura, Toshihide, Yamauchi, Keishi, Aizawa, Toru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Japanese
Published Japan The Japan Endocrine Society 01.01.2018
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Long-term glucose supplementation is required to prevent hypoglycemia after massive insulin overdosing. We fitted the blood insulin concentration-time profile to the model: I = A·exp(–a·t) + B·exp(–b·t), where I (μU/mL) is the serum/plasma insulin concentration, A (μU/mL) and B (μU/mL) are the peak insulin concentrations of each component, a (time–1) and b (time–1) are the time constants of each component, and t (h) is the time elapsed from the peak of blood insulin level. Additional components were considered as needed. Patient 1 had auto-injected 600 U NovoRapid® 30Mix, and Patient 2 had auto-injected 300 U Novolet®R (regular) and 1,800 U NovoLet®N (NPH). We used the disappearance of therapeutic doses of the respective insulin in healthy individuals as controls, and we obtained parameters by Excel solver. In Patient 1, the parameter values were A = 1490.04 and a = 0.15 for insulin aspart and B = 60.66 and b = 0.04 for protaminated aspart. In Patient 2, the values were A = 784.45 and a = 0.38 for regular insulin and B = 395.84 and b = 0.03 for NPH. Compared with controls, the half-lives (t1/2) for insulin aspart and protaminated aspart were 4 and 2 times longer, respectively, in Patient 1. In Patient 2, the t1/2 for regular and NPH insulin were 2 and 7 times longer than those in the controls, respectively. In conclusion, the t1/2 for insulin was elongated 2 to 7 times after massive overdosing, explaining why glucose supplementation is needed for long periods in these cases.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Case Study-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-4
content type line 23
ObjectType-Report-1
ObjectType-Article-3
ISSN:0918-8959
1348-4540
DOI:10.1507/endocrj.EJ18-0118