4.7 Article

The Unrecognized Prevalence of Primary Aldosteronism A Cross-sectional Study

Journal

ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 173, Issue 1, Pages 10-+

Publisher

AMER COLL PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.7326/M20-0065

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [T32 HL007604, 2T32HL007457-36A1, R01 HL113004, P01-HL-074940, R01-HL-128189, 5R01 HL136567, 1R01 HL144779, 1R01 HL114765, RM-07-2002, R01 HL085224, R01 HL086907, 5 P50 HL55000, R01 DK115392, R01 DK107407]
  2. American Heart Association [AHA 5SFRN2390002]

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Background: Primary aldosteronism is a nonsuppressible reninin-dependent aldosterone production that causes hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Objective: To characterize the prevalence of nonsuppressible renin-independent aldosterone production, as well as biochemically overt primary aldosteronism, in relation to blood pressure. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: 4 U.S. academic medical centers. Participants: Participants with normotension (n = 289), stage 1 hypertension (n = 115), stage 2 hypertension (n = 203), and resistant hypertension (n = 408). Measurements: Participants completed an oral sodium suppression test, regardless of aldosterone or renin levels, as a confirmatory diagnostic for primary aldosteronism and to quantify the magnitude of renin-independent aldosterone production. Urinary aldosterone was measured in participants in high sodium balance with suppressed renin activity. Biochemically overt primary aldosteronism was diagnosed when urinary aldosterone levels were higher than 12 mu g/24 h. Results: Every blood pressure category had a continuum of renin-independent aldosterone production, where greater severity of production was associated with higher blood pressure, kaliuresis, and lower serum potassium levels. Mean adjusted levels of urinary aldosterone were 6.5 mu g/24 h (95% CI, 5.2 to 7.7 mu g/24 h) in normotension, 7.3 mu g/24 h (CI, 5.6 to 8.9 mu g/24 h) in stage 1 hypertension, 9.5 mu g/24 h (CI, 8.2 to 10.8 mu g/24 h) in stage 2 hypertension, and 14.6 mu g/24 h (CI, 12.9 to 16.2 mu g/24 h) in resistant hypertension; corresponding adjusted prevalence estimates for biochemically overt primary aldosteronism were 11.3% (CI, 5.9% to 16.8%), 15.7% (CI, 8.6% to 22.9%), 21.6% (CI, 16.1% to 27.0%), and 22.0% (CI, 17.2% to 26.8%). The aldosterone-renin ratio had poor sensitivity and negative predictive value for detecting biochemically overt primary aldosteronism. Limitation: Prevalence estimates rely on arbitrary and conventional thresholds, and the study population may not represent nationwide demographics. Conclusion: The prevalence of primary aldosteronism is high and largely unrecognized. Beyond this categorical definition of primary aldosteronism, there is a prevalent continuum of reninin-dependent aldosterone production that parallels the severity of hypertension. These findings redefine the primary aldosteronism syndrome and implicate it in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension.

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