Prolonged elimination of tolbutamide in a premature newborn with hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia

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Abstract

So far, gestational diabetes treated with tolbutamide has never been associated with severe hypoglycaemia in the newborn when the mother's diabetes was well controlled. We report a case of a premature neonate, gestational age 34 weeks, with severe and long-standing hypoglycaemia from birth. The mother had well-controlled gestational diabetes, treated with tolbutamide from the 24th week of gestation until delivery. The neonate had inappropriately high levels of serum proinsulin, insulin and C-peptide relative to blood glucose concentrations. From day 19 after birth, the levels were normalized. Serum tolbutamide was 140.6 μmol/l (38 μg/ml) at 3 h after birth. Zero-order kinetics were seen during the first 90 postnatal hours. The half-life of serum tolbutamide decreased from 46 to 6 h. It is suggested that tolbutamide, when given to the mother until delivery, may cause severe and prolonged hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in premature neonates. The initially prolonged tolbutamide half-lives and zero-order kinetics suggest immaturity of hepatic elimination during the first 2 days of postnatal life.

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Christesen, H. B. T., & Melander, A. (1998). Prolonged elimination of tolbutamide in a premature newborn with hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia. European Journal of Endocrinology, 138(6), 698–701. https://doi.org/10.1530/eje.0.1380698

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