4.5 Article

Diverse pathological lesions of primary aldosteronism and their clinical significance

Journal

HYPERTENSION RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 498-507

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41440-020-00579-w

Keywords

Primary aldosteronism; Adrenal venous sampling; Aldosterone

Funding

  1. Practical Research Project for Rare/Intractable Disease [JP17ek0109122, JP20ek0109352]
  2. National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Japan [27-1402, 30-1008]
  3. KAKENHI grants [17K16173, 18K09205]
  4. Federation of National Public Service Personnel Mutual Aid Associations joint research project 2016 grant
  5. Health Labor Sciences Research grant [H29-Nanji-Ippan-046]
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K09205, 17K16173] Funding Source: KAKEN

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found a relationship between PA pathology and adrenalectomy outcomes, with higher complete success rates in the large PA lesion group compared to the small lesion group. Serum potassium level was identified as an independent predictive factor for small PA lesions. These findings are significant for guiding clinical treatment of PA.
Primary aldosteronism (PA) is mainly clinically classified as unilateral aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) or bilateral idiopathic hyperaldosteronism. Immunohistochemistry for aldosterone synthase reveals a diverse PA pathology, including pathological APA and aldosterone-producing cell clusters. The relationship between PA pathology and adrenalectomy outcomes was examined herein. Data from 219 unilaterally adrenalectomized PA cases were analyzed. Pathological analyses revealed diverse putative aldosterone-producing lesions. Postoperative biochemical outcomes in 114 cases (test cohort) were classified as complete success (n = 85), partial success (n = 19), and absent success (n = 10). Outcomes in the large and small PA lesion groups, rather than between PA lesion types, were compared at five threshold values for PA lesion sizes (2-6 mm with 1-mm increments) to streamline the results. The proportion of complete success was significantly higher in the large PA lesion group than in the small PA lesion group at the 5-mm threshold only. The proportion of absent success was significantly higher in the small PA lesion group than in the large PA lesion group at all thresholds. Univariate and multivariate analyses of the test cohort identified serum K as an independent predictive factor for the small PA lesion group, which was confirmed in the 105-case validation cohort. Chi-squared automatic interaction detector analysis revealed that the best threshold of serum K for predicting large PA lesions was 2.82 mEq/L. These results will be beneficial for treating PA in clinical settings because patients with low serum K levels and apparent adrenal masses on CT may be subjected to adrenalectomy even if the adrenal venous sampling test is unavailable.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available