Volume 9, Issue 4pt2 pp. 420-422

Insulin allergy desensitization with simultaneous intravenous insulin and continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion

Kristen A Neville

Corresponding Author

Kristen A Neville

Department of Endocrinology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

Dr Kristen A Neville
Department of Endocrinology
Sydney Children’s Hospital
High St Randwick
NSW 2031
Australia.
Tel: 61 2 9382 1456;
fax: 61 2 9382 1787;
e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Charles F Verge

Charles F Verge

Department of Endocrinology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

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Brynn K Wainstein

Brynn K Wainstein

Department of Immunology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

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Helen J Woodhead

Helen J Woodhead

Department of Endocrinology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

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John B Ziegler

John B Ziegler

Department of Immunology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

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Jan L Walker

Jan L Walker

Department of Endocrinology, Sydney Children’s Hospital, New South Wales, Australia

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First published: 29 July 2008
Citations: 14

Abstract

Abstract: Persistent ‘IgE-mediated’ insulin allergy (type 1 allergy) (1), unresponsive to changes in insulin type or the use of antihistamines, necessitates desensitization. A number of case reports (2–7) and recent reviews (8, 9) have demonstrated that desensitization can be achieved with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII), but in type 1 diabetes mellitus, the need to slowly increase insulin dose from sub-therapeutic levels competes with the need for glycaemic control and suppression of ketogenesis. Tolerance to intravenous (IV) insulin despite persistent life-threatening allergic reactions to subcutaneous human insulin (bolus or CSII) has been recently described (10). We present the cases of two unrelated 9-yr-old boys with persistent generalized urticarial reactions to subcutaneous injections of all available insulin types, despite treatment with oral antihistamines. After failed rapid desensitization to insulin delivered by either subcutaneous injection or CSII, the concurrent use of IV insulin allowed desensitization to CSII over 5–6 d.

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