| Literature DB >> 21837271 |
Riccardo Maria Fagugli1, Chiara Taglioni.
Abstract
Primary aldosteronism has been considered a rare disease in the past years, affecting 1% of the hypertensive population. Subsequently, growing evidence of its higher prevalence is present in literature, although the estimates of disease range from 5 up to 20%, as in type 2 diabetes and resistant hypertension. The main reasons for these variations are associated with the selection of patients and diagnostic procedures. If we consider that hypertension is present in about 20% of the adult population, primary aldosteronism can no longer be considered a rare disease. Patients with primary aldosteronism have a high incidence of cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and kidney complications. The identification of these patients has therefore a practical value on therapy, and to control morbidities derived from vascular damage. The ability to identify the prevalence of a disease depends on the number of subjects studied and the methods of investigation. Epidemiological studies are affected by these two problems: there is not consensus on patients who need to be investigated, although testing is recommended in subjects with resistant hypertension and diabetes. The question of how to determine aldosterone and renin levels is open, particularly if pharmacological wash-out is difficult to perform because of inadequate blood pressure control.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21837271 PMCID: PMC3151507 DOI: 10.4061/2011/162804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Subtypes of primary aldosteronism [6].
| Aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA)—35% of cases |
| Bilateral idiopathic hyperplasia (IHA)—60% of cases |
| Primary unilateral adrenal hyperplasia—2% of cases |
| Pure aldosterone-producing adrenocortical carcinoma—<1% of cases |
| Familial hyperaldosteronism |
| Type I = glucocorticoid remediable aldosteronism—<1% of cases. |
| Type II = familial APA or IHA—<2% of cases. |
| Ectopic aldosterone-producing adenoma or carcinoma—<0.1% of cases |
Epidemiology study on primary aldosteronism.
| Author | Ref. | Clinical setting | Number of Patients | Type of study | Diagnostic Criteria | Confirmatory test for PA | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conn 1967 | [ | Hypothesis | 10% | ||||
| Fishman et al. 1969 | [ | Hospital | 90 EH | Prospective | Increased aldosterone or suppressed PRA levels | No | <1% |
| Gordon et al. 1990 | [ | Hospital | 52 EH | Prospective | ARR | Yes | 12% |
| Gordon et al. 1994 | [ | Hospital | 199 EH | Prospective | ARR | Yes | 8.5–12% |
| Fardella et al. 2000 | [ | Hospital | 305 EH | Prospective | ARR > 25 | Yes | 9.5% |
| 205 NT | |||||||
| Newton-Cheh et al. 2008 | [ | General pract. | 3326 EH | Retrospective | Aldosterone/plasma renin > 26 ng/L mU/L | No | 7.9–31.1% |
| Olivieri et al. 2004 | [ | General pract. | 412 EH | Prospective | Aldosterone/active renin > 32 pg/mL | No | 32.4% |
| Rossi et al. 2006 | [ | Hospital | 1125 EH | Prospective | ARR > 25 | Yes | 11.2% |
| Williams et al. 2006 | [ | Hospital | 347 EH | Prospective | ARR > 25 | Yes | 3.4% |
| Calhoun et al. 2002 | [ | Hospital—RH | 88 EH | Prospective | PRA < 1 ng/mL/h | Yes | 20% |
| u.Aldosterone > 12 pg/24 h | |||||||
| Gallay 2001 | [ | Hospital—RH | 90 EH | prospective | ARR > 100 | Yes | 19% |
| Strauch et al. 2003 | [ | Hospital—RH | 402 EH | prospective | ARR > 100 | Yes | 19% |
| Di Murro et al. 2010 | [ | Hospital—OSA | 325 EH | prospective | ARR > 40 | Yes | 33.9% |
| Mukherjee et al. 2010 | [ | Hospital—diabetes | 100 EH | prospective | ARR > 550 | Yes | 13% |
| Aldosterone = pmol/L | |||||||
| Unpierrez et al. 2007 | [ | Hospital—diabetes | 100 EH | prospective | ARR > 30 | Yes | 14% |
RH: resistant hypertension; OSA: obstructive apnea syndrome; EH: essential hypertension; NT: normotensive patients; ARR: aldosterone/plasma renin activity.