A patient with nivolumab-related fulminant type 1 diabetes mellitus whose serum C-peptide level was preserved at the initial detection of hyperglycemia

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Abstract

A 77-year-old-man with renal cell carcinoma who was undergoing nivolumab treatment visited our department due to hyperglycemia; his plasma glucose level was 379 mg/dL. Although his serum C-peptide immunoreactivity (CPR) level was preserved (5.92 ng/mL), we suspected an onset of fulminant type 1 diabetes mellitus (FT1DM) and immediately started insulin therapy. His CPR levels gradually decreased and were depleted within 1 week. We later discovered that the patient's casual CPR level had been abnormally high (11.78 ng/mL) 2 weeks before his admission. Hence, the possibility of FT1DM in hyperglycemic patients undergoing nivolumab treatment should not be excluded, even with a preserved CPR level.

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Yamamoto, N., Tsurutani, Y., Katsuragawa, S., Kubo, H., Sunouchi, T., Hirose, R., … Nishikawa, T. (2019). A patient with nivolumab-related fulminant type 1 diabetes mellitus whose serum C-peptide level was preserved at the initial detection of hyperglycemia. Internal Medicine, 58(19), 2825–2830. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.2780-19

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