Hypoglycemia is a medical emergency with a multitude of potential causes. Paraneoplastic hypoglycemia represents a rare cause of this condition. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) can result in paraneoplastic hypoglycemia through extensive tumor infiltration and the presence of insulin-like growth factor 2 precursors. In this article, a patient whose persistent hypoglycemia did not improve despite long-term intravenous glucose and high-dose steroid treatment and who was successfully treated with octreotide is described. A 50-year-old male patient with a diagnosis of metastatic HCC was admitted to the emergency department due to symptomatic hypoglycemia. His blood glucose level was found to be 40 mg/dl and he was hospitalized in our clinic for treatment. The patient, who had been on sorafenib treatment for 2 weeks due to HCC, was started on intravenous dextrose for hypoglycemia and steroid, glucagon, and octreotide treatments, respectively. The patient's sorafenib treatment was discontinued and a second-line palliative chemotherapy was initiated. The patient responded dramatically to octreotide treatment and the need for intravenous glucose gradually decreased. Following approximately six weeks after hospitalization, the patient's requirement for intravenous glucose was no longer necessary. HCC and its treatment is a complex process involving the activation or inhibition of various mechanisms, and refractory hypoglycemia may rarely be seen in patients with HCC. But the cause of hypoglycemia may not always be identified. In cases where the cause is not understood, other treatment options for hypoglycemia, such as increasing caloric intake, intravenous glucose administration, high-dose steroids, glucagon, and octreotide, should be considered.
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