Metastatic insulinoma presenting 14 years after benign tumour resection: A rare case and management dilemma

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Abstract

We present a 60-year-old woman who underwent successful surgical resection (partial pancreatectomy) for a low grade non-functioning pancreatic neuroendocrine tumour (pNET), with no biochemical or radiological features of recurrence on follow-up visits for 5 years. Fourteen years after the initial surgery, she developed spontaneous severe hypoglycaemic episodes which required hospitalisation, with subsequent investigations confirming the diagnosis of a metastatic insulin-secreting pNET (insulinoma). Medical management of her severe spontaneous hypoglycaemic episodes remained challenging, despite optimum use of diazoxide and somatostatin analogue therapy. Based on a discussion at the regional neuroendocrine tumour multidisciplinary team meeting, she underwent an elective hepatic trans-arterial embolization which was unfortunately unsuccessful. She ended up requiring an emergency right hemihepatectomy and left retroperitoneal mass resection which finally stabilised her clinical condition.

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Keen, F., Iqbal, F., Owen, P., Christian, A., Kumar, N., & Kalhan, A. (2020). Metastatic insulinoma presenting 14 years after benign tumour resection: A rare case and management dilemma. Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism Case Reports, 2020(1), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1530/EDM-20-0065

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