Recipients with post-transplantation hypoglycaemia were more likely to be women and of low body weight, which may be due to disordered eating with restricted calorie or carbohydrate intake. Recipients with post-transplantation hyperglycaemia had features of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes with increased weight and men predominance. Glycaemic disturbance was not associated with graft failure, suggesting it relates to insulin-glucose mismatch rather than rejection. Further follow-up is required to identify the long-term sequelae of glycaemic disturbance after pancreas transplants and if relevant dietary counselling has the potential to attenuate these disturbances.
Kozuch et al. (Tue,) studied this question.