AbstractPDF
Abstract
A 48-year-old patient with diabetes mellitus was treated
with human (recombinant) insulin. He developed cutaneous amyloidosis twice at different locations where
subcutaneous insulin had been injected. There were no signs of systemic amyloidosis. Additional pathological-anatomical investigations demonstrated insulin in one (the most recent) amyloid tumour. A limited number of similar cases have been reported in the literature, although mostly associated with porcine insulin. Cutaneous amyloidosis may be associated with local injections of human (recombinant) insulin. One should therefore also consider this diagnosis when finding
tumours at sites where insulin has been injected.