HomeOctreotideOctreotide + Insulin Glargine

Does Octreotide Interact with Insulin Glargine?

Octreotide and Insulin Glargine have a major drug interaction according to U.S. FDA drug labeling data. May increase risk of hypoglycemia. Dosage reductions and increased glucose monitoring may be required. The mechanism involves increases risk of hypoglycemia. Patients taking both medications should consult their healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing the dosage of either drug. This information is based on official FDA drug labeling sourced from OpenFDA and the NIH National Library of Medicine.

Severity
Major
Octreotide Class
Somatostatin Analog
Insulin Glargine Class
Insulin Analog
Management
Close medical supervision required
Data Source
U.S. FDA via OpenFDA

How This Interaction Works

The interaction between Octreotide and Insulin Glargine occurs because increases risk of hypoglycemia. Clinically, this means may increase risk of hypoglycemia. dosage reductions and increased glucose monitoring may be required. This is classified as a major interaction, meaning it could cause serious harm if not properly managed. Your healthcare provider may need to adjust dosages, substitute one medication, or increase monitoring frequency.

What To Tell Your Doctor or Pharmacist

If you are taking Octreotide and your doctor is considering prescribing Insulin Glargine (or vice versa), make sure to:

  • Inform your doctor and pharmacist of all current medications, including over-the-counter drugs and supplements
  • Ask whether the benefits of combining these medications outweigh the risks for your specific situation
  • Ask what symptoms to watch for that would indicate the interaction is causing problems
  • Ask how frequently you should be monitored while these are co-prescribed
  • Ask whether any dosage adjustments are needed
  • Never stop or change either medication without first consulting your healthcare provider
💊 Octreotide(Mycapssa)+💊 Insulin Glargine(Basaglar Kwikpen)

Severity & Interaction Details

⚠️
major
Use with caution — major interaction
Serious risk of clinically significant harm. Generally avoid; if used, monitor closely.
Severity scale
MinorContra
On record
Yes
Drug A class
Somatostatin Analog
Drug B class
Insulin Analog
Source
NLP:insulin glargine

What this means in plain English

May increase risk of hypoglycemia. Dosage reductions and increased glucose monitoring may be required.

What the FDA label says

"Increases risk of hypoglycemia"

📖 Source: NLP:insulin glargine

Share this result:XFacebookWhatsAppReddit
Add more drugs
Check Octreotide and Insulin Glargine against your full medication list

Most patients take more than two medications. CDI checks every pair across up to 20 drugs simultaneously — including OTCs and common supplements.

Add more drugs →

Data sourced from U.S. FDA drug labeling via openFDA and the NIH National Library of Medicine. For informational purposes only. Always consult your pharmacist or physician.