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67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence

ABSTRACT IMPACT: Long-acting insulin containing protamine is more likely to be associated with skin depigmentation. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: An acquired disorder, skin depigmentation was found to be significantly correlated with diabetes. While a recent meta-analysis pointed at a possible similar pathogene...

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Autores principales: Lukasik, James, Wintrob, Zachary A.P., Costin, G. Emilia, Ceacareanu, Alice C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827670/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.484
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author Lukasik, James
Wintrob, Zachary A.P.
Costin, G. Emilia
Ceacareanu, Alice C.
author_facet Lukasik, James
Wintrob, Zachary A.P.
Costin, G. Emilia
Ceacareanu, Alice C.
author_sort Lukasik, James
collection PubMed
description ABSTRACT IMPACT: Long-acting insulin containing protamine is more likely to be associated with skin depigmentation. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: An acquired disorder, skin depigmentation was found to be significantly correlated with diabetes. While a recent meta-analysis pointed at a possible similar pathogenesis, the possibility of vitiligo occurring as a drug-induced disease was never explored. This study aimed at elucidating whether utilization of specific insulins may play a role. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Records from the Medical Panels Expenditure Survey (MEPS) database made available by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality were used to identify all injectable insulin users (n=8867). ICD-9/10 codes were abstracted from the medical conditions files for all the subjects reporting any type of injectable insulin use (1996-2017). Skin depigmentation codes identified in our dataset were 709 and L81. Insulins were categorized based on duration of action, short-acting (SA), intermediate-acting (IA), and long-acting (LA), as well as based on formulation ingredients (zinc, protamine-zinc, other), and insulin combination (SA with or without IA/LA containing or not protamine-zinc). The association between skin depigmentation occurrence and insulin type and/or category was assessed by Fisher’s exact test. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: A total of 225 out of 8867 individuals were diagnosed with skin depigmentation. Incidence of skin depigmentation was 2.25% in SA users (n1=3606, p=0.355), 2.24% in LA users (n2=3910, p=0.337), and 2.39% in IA users (n3=4015, p=0.062). Occurrence of skin depigmentation was similar between users of insulin mono- or combo therapy (p=0.758). Interestingly, among IA insulins, insulin protamine-zinc insulin (n4=3992) distinguished as being mainly responsible for the association with the occurrence of skin depigmentation (p=0.062), whereas insulin zinc was not (n5=37, p=1.000). The highest skin depigmentation incidence was observed among Pacific Islanders (2.66%, p=0.110). Males distinguished by a skin depigmentation incidence of 2.34% vs. 1.91% in females (p=0.086). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: We report that presence of protamine-zinc may play a role in the development of skin depigmentation. It is uncertain whether this risk may be shared equally by insulin users diagnosed with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Of note, we observed a higher skin depigmentation incidence than that reported by community- (0.2%) or hospital-based (1.8%) studies.
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spelling pubmed-88276702022-02-28 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence Lukasik, James Wintrob, Zachary A.P. Costin, G. Emilia Ceacareanu, Alice C. J Clin Transl Sci Clinical Epidemiology ABSTRACT IMPACT: Long-acting insulin containing protamine is more likely to be associated with skin depigmentation. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: An acquired disorder, skin depigmentation was found to be significantly correlated with diabetes. While a recent meta-analysis pointed at a possible similar pathogenesis, the possibility of vitiligo occurring as a drug-induced disease was never explored. This study aimed at elucidating whether utilization of specific insulins may play a role. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Records from the Medical Panels Expenditure Survey (MEPS) database made available by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality were used to identify all injectable insulin users (n=8867). ICD-9/10 codes were abstracted from the medical conditions files for all the subjects reporting any type of injectable insulin use (1996-2017). Skin depigmentation codes identified in our dataset were 709 and L81. Insulins were categorized based on duration of action, short-acting (SA), intermediate-acting (IA), and long-acting (LA), as well as based on formulation ingredients (zinc, protamine-zinc, other), and insulin combination (SA with or without IA/LA containing or not protamine-zinc). The association between skin depigmentation occurrence and insulin type and/or category was assessed by Fisher’s exact test. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: A total of 225 out of 8867 individuals were diagnosed with skin depigmentation. Incidence of skin depigmentation was 2.25% in SA users (n1=3606, p=0.355), 2.24% in LA users (n2=3910, p=0.337), and 2.39% in IA users (n3=4015, p=0.062). Occurrence of skin depigmentation was similar between users of insulin mono- or combo therapy (p=0.758). Interestingly, among IA insulins, insulin protamine-zinc insulin (n4=3992) distinguished as being mainly responsible for the association with the occurrence of skin depigmentation (p=0.062), whereas insulin zinc was not (n5=37, p=1.000). The highest skin depigmentation incidence was observed among Pacific Islanders (2.66%, p=0.110). Males distinguished by a skin depigmentation incidence of 2.34% vs. 1.91% in females (p=0.086). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: We report that presence of protamine-zinc may play a role in the development of skin depigmentation. It is uncertain whether this risk may be shared equally by insulin users diagnosed with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Of note, we observed a higher skin depigmentation incidence than that reported by community- (0.2%) or hospital-based (1.8%) studies. Cambridge University Press 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8827670/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.484 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Epidemiology
Lukasik, James
Wintrob, Zachary A.P.
Costin, G. Emilia
Ceacareanu, Alice C.
67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title_full 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title_fullStr 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title_full_unstemmed 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title_short 67863 Insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
title_sort 67863 insulin use and depigmentation: a survey of real-world evidence
topic Clinical Epidemiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827670/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.484
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