4.7 Article

Genetics and Natural History of Non-pancreatectomized Patients With Congenital Hyperinsulinism Due to Variants in ABCC8

Journal

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgad280

Keywords

congenital hyperinsulinism; hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy; hyperglycemia; diabetes; nonpancreatectomized; natural history; ABCC8 gene

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This study describes the genetic characteristics and natural history of non-pancreatectomized patients with congenital hyperinsulinism due to ABCC8 gene variants. It was found that 70.6% of these patients experienced spontaneous resolution, with some progressing to diabetes with insufficient insulin secretion. Therefore, conservative medical treatment is a reliable management strategy.
Context Patients with congenital hyperinsulinism due to ABCC8 variants generally present severe hypoglycemia and those who do not respond to medical treatment typically undergo pancreatectomy. Few data exist on the natural history of non-pancreatectomized patients. Objective This work aims to describe the genetic characteristics and natural history in a cohort of non-pancreatectomized patients with congenital hyperinsulinism due to variants in the ABCC8 gene. Methods Ambispective study of patients with congenital hyperinsulinism with pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in ABCC8 treated in the last 48 years and who were not pancreatectomized. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has been periodically performed in all patients since 2003. An oral glucose tolerance test was performed if hyperglycemia was detected in the CGM. Results Eighteen non-pancreatectomized patients with ABCC8 variants were included. Seven (38.9%) patients were heterozygous, 8 (44.4%) compound heterozygous, 2 (11.1%) homozygous, and 1 patient carried 2 variants with incomplete familial segregation studies. Seventeen patients were followed up and 12 (70.6%) of them evolved to spontaneous resolution (median age 6.0 +/- 4 years; range, 1-14). Five of these 12 patients (41.7%) subsequently progressed to diabetes with insufficient insulin secretion. Evolution to diabetes was more frequent in patients with biallelic variants in the ABCC8 gene. Conclusion The high remission rate observed in our cohort makes conservative medical treatment a reliable strategy for the management of patients with congenital hyperinsulinism due to ABCC8 variants. In addition, a periodic follow-up of glucose metabolism after remission is recommended, as a significant proportion of patients evolved to impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes (biphasic phenotype).

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