TY - JOUR
T1 - Feasibility of imaging-guided adrenalectomy in young patients with primary aldosteronism
AU - Rossi, Gian Paolo
AU - Crimì, Filippo
AU - Rossitto, Giacomo
AU - Amar, Laurence
AU - Azizi, Michel
AU - Riester, Anna
AU - Reincke, Martin
AU - Degenhart, Christoph
AU - Widimsky, Jiri
AU - Naruse, Mitsuhide
AU - Deinum, Jaap
AU - Kool, Leo Schultze
AU - Kocjan, Tomaz
AU - Negro, Aurelio
AU - Rossi, Ermanno
AU - Kline, Gregory
AU - Tanabe, Akiyo
AU - Satoh, Fumitoshi
AU - Rump, Lars Christian
AU - Vonend, Oliver
AU - Willenberg, Holger S.
AU - Fuller, Peter J.
AU - Yang, Jun
AU - Chee, Nicholas Yong Nian
AU - Magill, Steven B.
AU - Shafigullina, Zulfiya
AU - Quinkler, Marcus
AU - Oliveras, Anna
AU - Wu, Vin Cent
AU - Kratka, Zuzana
AU - Barbiero, Giulio
AU - Battistel, Michele
AU - Seccia, Teresa Maria
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported in part by research grants to G.P. Rossi from FORICA (The Foundation for advanced Research In Hypertension and CArdiovascular diseases) and from the Else Kröner-Fresenius-Stiftung to M. Reincke. A. Riester, M. Reincke, and J. Deinum received support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DGE, German Research Foundation, Projektnummer 314061271-TRR 205); from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) (JP20ek0109352) to M. Naruse; from the National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Japan (27-1402, 30-1008) to A. Tanabe.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Heart Association, Inc.
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - Many of the patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) are denied curative adrenalectomy because of limited availability or failure of adrenal vein sampling. It has been suggested that adrenal vein sampling can be omitted in young patients with a unilateral adrenal nodule, who show a florid biochemical PA phenotype. As this suggestion was based on a very low quality of evidence, we tested the applicability and accuracy of imaging, performed by computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance, for identification of unilateral PA, as determined by biochemical and/or clinical cure after unilateral adrenalectomy. Among 1625 patients with PA submitted to adrenal vein sampling in a multicenter multiethnic international study, 473 were ≤45 years of age; 231 of them had exhaustive imaging and follow-up data. Fifty-three percentage had a unilateral adrenal nodule, 43% had no nodules, and 4% bilateral nodules. Fifty-six percentage (n=131) received adrenalectomy and 128 were unambiguously diagnosed as unilateral PA. A unilateral adrenal nodule on imaging and hypokalemia were the strongest predictors of unilateral PA at regression analysis. Accordingly, imaging allowed correct identification of the responsible adrenal in 95% of the adrenalectomized patients with a unilateral nodule. The rate raised to 100% in the patients with hypokalemia, who comprised 29% of the total, but fell to 88% in those without hypokalemia. Therefore, a unilateral nodule and hypokalemia could be used to identify unilateral PA in patients ≤45 years of age if adrenal vein sampling is not easily available. However, adrenal vein sampling remains indispensable in 71% of the young patients, who showed no nodules/bilateral nodules at imaging and/or no hypokalemia.
AB - Many of the patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) are denied curative adrenalectomy because of limited availability or failure of adrenal vein sampling. It has been suggested that adrenal vein sampling can be omitted in young patients with a unilateral adrenal nodule, who show a florid biochemical PA phenotype. As this suggestion was based on a very low quality of evidence, we tested the applicability and accuracy of imaging, performed by computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance, for identification of unilateral PA, as determined by biochemical and/or clinical cure after unilateral adrenalectomy. Among 1625 patients with PA submitted to adrenal vein sampling in a multicenter multiethnic international study, 473 were ≤45 years of age; 231 of them had exhaustive imaging and follow-up data. Fifty-three percentage had a unilateral adrenal nodule, 43% had no nodules, and 4% bilateral nodules. Fifty-six percentage (n=131) received adrenalectomy and 128 were unambiguously diagnosed as unilateral PA. A unilateral adrenal nodule on imaging and hypokalemia were the strongest predictors of unilateral PA at regression analysis. Accordingly, imaging allowed correct identification of the responsible adrenal in 95% of the adrenalectomized patients with a unilateral nodule. The rate raised to 100% in the patients with hypokalemia, who comprised 29% of the total, but fell to 88% in those without hypokalemia. Therefore, a unilateral nodule and hypokalemia could be used to identify unilateral PA in patients ≤45 years of age if adrenal vein sampling is not easily available. However, adrenal vein sampling remains indispensable in 71% of the young patients, who showed no nodules/bilateral nodules at imaging and/or no hypokalemia.
KW - Aldosterone
KW - Diagnosis
KW - Hypertension
KW - Hypokalemia
KW - Phenotype
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85120987584&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.18284
DO - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.18284
M3 - Article
C2 - 34878892
AN - SCOPUS:85120987584
SN - 0194-911X
VL - 79
SP - 187
EP - 195
JO - Hypertension
JF - Hypertension
IS - 1
ER -