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This version published online on September 4, 2007
Endocrine Reviews, doi:10.1210/er.2007-0002
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*Substance via MeSH

Immunologic Responses to Exogenous Insulin

S. Edwin Fineberg*, Thomas T. Kawabata, Deborah Finco-Kent, Robert J. Fountaine, Gregory L. Finch, and Alan S. Krasner

Indiana University School of Medicine (S.E.F.), Indianapolis, Indiana 46202; University of Alabama Birmingham School of Medicine (S.E.F.), Birmingham, Alabama 35294; and Pfizer Global Research and Development (T.T.K., D.F.K., R.J.F., G.L.F., A.S.K.), Groton, Connecticut 06320

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: efineber{at}iupui.edu.

Regardless of purity and origin, therapeutic insulins continue to be immunogenic in humans. However, severe immunologic complications occur rarely, and less severe events affect a small minority of patients. Insulin antibodies (IAs) may be detectable in insulin-naïve individuals who have a high likelihood of developing type 1 diabetes or in patients who have had viral disorders, have been treated with various drugs, or have autoimmune disorders or paraneoplastic syndromes. This suggests that under certain circumstances immune tolerance to insulin can be overcome. Factors that can lead to more or less susceptibility to humoral responses to exogenous insulin include the recipient's immune response genes, age, the presence of sufficient circulating autologous insulin, and the site of insulin delivery. Little proof exists, however, that the development of antibodies to exogenous insulin therapy affects integrated glucose control, insulin dose requirements, and incidence of hypoglycemia, or contributes to {beta}-cell failure or to long-term complications of diabetes. Studies in which pregnant women with diabetes were monitored for glycemic control argue against a connection between IAs and fetal risk. Although studies have shown increased levels of immune complexes in patients with diabetic microangiopathic complications, these immune complexes often do not contain insulin or IAs, and insulin administration does not contribute to their formation. The majority of studies have shown no relationship between IAs and diabetic angiopathic complications, including nephropathy, retinopathy, and neuropathy. With the advent of novel insulin formulations and delivery systems, such as insulin pumps and inhaled insulin, examination of these issues is increasingly relevant.




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