Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome

In rare cases, the monoclonal immunoglobulin that characterizes essential monoclonal gammopathy interacts with a self-antigen with functional consequences and a resulting clinical syndrome. This event is presumably random and results from the clone of B lymphocytes making a monoclonal immunoglobulin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marshall A. Lichtman, Sophia R. Balderman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rambam Health Care Campus 2015-07-01
Series:Rambam Maimonides Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rmmj.org.il/Pages/ArticleHTM.aspx?manuId=498
id doaj-5d51f826486e4d409ea1a63200ebedf5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5d51f826486e4d409ea1a63200ebedf52020-11-24T23:30:54ZengRambam Health Care CampusRambam Maimonides Medical Journal2076-91722015-07-0163e002710.5041/RMMJ.10212Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune SyndromeMarshall A. Lichtman0Sophia R. Balderman1Professor of Medicine and of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Department of Medicine and James P. Wilmot Cancer Center, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USAInstructor in Medicine, Department of Medicine and James P. Wilmot Cancer Center, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USAIn rare cases, the monoclonal immunoglobulin that characterizes essential monoclonal gammopathy interacts with a self-antigen with functional consequences and a resulting clinical syndrome. This event is presumably random and results from the clone of B lymphocytes making a monoclonal immunoglobulin that simulates an autoimmune antibody. Thus, by chance, the monoclonal immunoglobulin has sufficient affinity for an epitope on a normal protein that functional consequences ensue. One such rare event is the synthesis and secretion of a monoclonal immunoglobulin that binds to human insulin. Inactivation of insulin by antibody results in (1) an early postprandial hyperglycemia, (2) followed by either or both (i) a reactive overshot in insulin secretion, as a result of hypertrophied or hyperplastic islet beta cells, later falling glucose levels, and (ii) an unpredictable dissociation of insulin from the complex, and, several hours later, (3) a resultant increase in free insulin levels and severe hypoglycemia with clinical consequences, ranging from sweating, dizziness, headache, and tremors to confusion, seizures, and unconsciousness. These attacks are invariably responsive to glucose administration. This very uncommon manifestation of a monoclonal gammopathy can occur in patients with essential monoclonal gammopathy or myeloma. The monoclonal anti-insulin immunoglobulin in monoclonal gammopathy has a low affinity for insulin, but has a high capacity for insulin-binding, resulting in the syndrome of episodic hypoglycemic attacks. This phenomenon of an insulin-binding monoclonal immunoglobulin simulates the acquired insulin autoimmune syndrome, although the latter is mediated by a polyclonal antibody response in the majority of cases studied, and has linkage to HLA class II alleles.http://rmmj.org.il/Pages/ArticleHTM.aspx?manuId=498Anti-insulin antibodieshypoglycemiainsulininsulin autoimmune syndromemonoclonal gammopathy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marshall A. Lichtman
Sophia R. Balderman
spellingShingle Marshall A. Lichtman
Sophia R. Balderman
Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
Rambam Maimonides Medical Journal
Anti-insulin antibodies
hypoglycemia
insulin
insulin autoimmune syndrome
monoclonal gammopathy
author_facet Marshall A. Lichtman
Sophia R. Balderman
author_sort Marshall A. Lichtman
title Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
title_short Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
title_full Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
title_fullStr Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Unusual Manifestations of Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy. II. Simulation of the Insulin Autoimmune Syndrome
title_sort unusual manifestations of essential monoclonal gammopathy. ii. simulation of the insulin autoimmune syndrome
publisher Rambam Health Care Campus
series Rambam Maimonides Medical Journal
issn 2076-9172
publishDate 2015-07-01
description In rare cases, the monoclonal immunoglobulin that characterizes essential monoclonal gammopathy interacts with a self-antigen with functional consequences and a resulting clinical syndrome. This event is presumably random and results from the clone of B lymphocytes making a monoclonal immunoglobulin that simulates an autoimmune antibody. Thus, by chance, the monoclonal immunoglobulin has sufficient affinity for an epitope on a normal protein that functional consequences ensue. One such rare event is the synthesis and secretion of a monoclonal immunoglobulin that binds to human insulin. Inactivation of insulin by antibody results in (1) an early postprandial hyperglycemia, (2) followed by either or both (i) a reactive overshot in insulin secretion, as a result of hypertrophied or hyperplastic islet beta cells, later falling glucose levels, and (ii) an unpredictable dissociation of insulin from the complex, and, several hours later, (3) a resultant increase in free insulin levels and severe hypoglycemia with clinical consequences, ranging from sweating, dizziness, headache, and tremors to confusion, seizures, and unconsciousness. These attacks are invariably responsive to glucose administration. This very uncommon manifestation of a monoclonal gammopathy can occur in patients with essential monoclonal gammopathy or myeloma. The monoclonal anti-insulin immunoglobulin in monoclonal gammopathy has a low affinity for insulin, but has a high capacity for insulin-binding, resulting in the syndrome of episodic hypoglycemic attacks. This phenomenon of an insulin-binding monoclonal immunoglobulin simulates the acquired insulin autoimmune syndrome, although the latter is mediated by a polyclonal antibody response in the majority of cases studied, and has linkage to HLA class II alleles.
topic Anti-insulin antibodies
hypoglycemia
insulin
insulin autoimmune syndrome
monoclonal gammopathy
url http://rmmj.org.il/Pages/ArticleHTM.aspx?manuId=498
work_keys_str_mv AT marshallalichtman unusualmanifestationsofessentialmonoclonalgammopathyiisimulationoftheinsulinautoimmunesyndrome
AT sophiarbalderman unusualmanifestationsofessentialmonoclonalgammopathyiisimulationoftheinsulinautoimmunesyndrome
_version_ 1725539750560923648