| Literature DB >> 31476901 |
Gian Paolo Rossi1, Giacomo Rossitto1,2, Laurence Amar3,4, Michel Azizi3,5, Anna Riester6, Martin Reincke6, Christoph Degenhart6, Jiri Widimsky7, Mitsuhide Naruse8, Jaap Deinum9, Leo Schultze Kool10,11, Tomaz Kocjan12, Aurelio Negro13, Ermanno Rossi13, Gregory Kline14, Akiyo Tanabe15, Fumitoshi Satoh16, Lars Christian Rump17, Oliver Vonend17, Holger S Willenberg18, Peter J Fuller19, Jun Yang19, Nicholas Yong Nian Chee19, Steven B Magill20, Zulfiya Shafigullina, Marcus Quinkler21, Anna Oliveras22, Kwan Dun Wu23, Vin-Cent Wu23, Zusana Kratka7,24, Giulio Barbiero25, Michele Battistel25, Chin-Chen Chang26, Paul-Emmanuel Vanderriele1, Achille C Pessina1.
Abstract
We sought to measure the clinical benefits of adrenal venous sampling (AVS), a test recommended by guidelines for primary aldosteronism (PA) patients seeking surgical cure, in a large registry of PA patients submitted to AVS. Data of 1625 consecutive patients submitted to AVS in 19 tertiary referral centers located in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America were collected in a large multicenter international registry. The primary end points were the rate of bilateral success, ascertained lateralization of PA, adrenalectomy, and of cured arterial hypertension among AVS-guided and non AVS-guided adrenalectomy patients. AVS was successful in 80.1% of all cases but allowed identification of unilateral PA in only 45.5% by the criteria in use at each center. Adrenalectomy was performed in 41.8% of all patients and cured arterial hypertension in 19.6% of the patients, 2-fold more frequently in women than men (P<0.001). When AVS-guided, surgery provided a higher rate of cure of hypertension than when non-AVS-guided (40.0% versus 30.5%; P=0.027). Compared with surgical cases, patients treated medically needed more antihypertensive medications (P<0.001) and exhibited a higher rate of persistent hypokalemia requiring potassium supplementation (4.9% versus 2.3%; P<0.01). The low rate of adrenalectomy and cure of hypertension in PA patients seeking surgical cure indicates suboptimal AVS use, possibly related to issues in patient selection, technical success, and AVS data interpretation. Given the better outcomes of AVS-guided adrenalectomy, these results call for actions to improve the diagnostic use of this test that is necessary for detection of surgical PA candidates. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01234220.Entities:
Keywords: adrenal vein sampling; adrenalectomy; diagnosis; hypertension; patient selection; potassium; subtyping
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31476901 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.119.13463
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190